11
votes
Academic grievance studies and the corruption of scholarship
Link information
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- Authors
- Helen Pluckrose, James A. Lindsay, Peter Boghossian, Boje Høyland Ellingsæter, Will Staton, Blake Winter, Russell Blackford, Matt Johnson, Mark Wright, Dolan Cummings
- Published
- Oct 3 2018
- Word count
- 11 758 words
Found a google drive with all the papers they submitted: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1cJLr_o04R-zpHcMNaIWPGs7Ue_i-tkCw
Related article from earlier on ~misc:
https://tildes.net/~misc/73n/the_grievance_studies_scandal_five_academics_respond
While there is an unquestionable problem with rigor and ideology in specific academic disciplines, it's as much an issue of groupthink on both sides, and a blindness to the notion that they're looking in the wrong places if they want to actually measure and address real-world injustice.
The "grievance studies" group have contributed to social-Darwinist propaganda that's making the rounds (the Wall Street Journal, for pity's sake!). The insular "studies" branches of academe are, as the article claims, producing sophistry without any attempt at quantification, and in fact have perverted the original philosophies that underlie "post-modernism".
Neither of the warring sides calls for going out and talking to people who are actually severely disadvantaged, examining and hypothesis-testing the causes of their disadvantage...
Both sides are so divorced from practicality that they're completely ignoring other disciplines which do genuine work, like urban studies, population studies, and other multidisciplinary undertakings that draw from the entirety of knowledge rather than minutely fractionating and building ideological walls over which arguments can be flung.
And the final paragraph is of note too:
While I haven't had a chance to read through all of these papers, it's clear that they spent some time designing these studies to highlight some of the issues that should be glaring and called out during the peer review process.
In the end, they were eventually exposed, so the peer review process succeeded, but not until after many papers were accepted and published, which brings into question the institutions that published them.
While this is possible, I completely understand and empathize with their disgust in the current state of some scientific journals.
That being said, I can hardly expect the "Journal of Poetry Therapy" to have particularly strong scientific methodology at the heart of its core principles. The reality is a field like that emerged because someone thought poetry could be therapeutic and decided to start gathering science to prove this. While people thinking in this fashion is important, the reality is that it's probably not particularly effective for most people, and therefore in order to show scientific credibility, they're probably more likely to fall back on less scientific methods like autoethnography (thought experiments or self-reflection, in essence) supported by other research or studies to "prove a point" or present a hypothesis with some "evidence".
I'm still working my way through the article and unfortunately I probably don't have the time necessary to try and collect the full text of the submitted articles so I'm not sure what consensus I am going to end up at... but, on the principle of "shoddy" publications and especially the subsequent reporting that happens on them, I'm completely in agreement that it's a problem. It's not only a problem in the social sciences, I see this all the time when another journal article comes out where they did a survey for 20 years and found a correlation between people who ate red meat and cardiovascular deaths, and suddenly there's a front page article about how "red meat will kill you".
My only response to sweeping generalizations about survey data is the standard "yeah, well you use internet explorer so you're a murderer".