I didn’t forget about Christianity but think we’d have to go back pretty far to see as much influence from it in journalism, academia, K-12 education (our main epistemic institutions) as we see today from leftist ideology. Curious if you have a different take on this.
“blacklisting communists” was in response to a rather obvious real threat, and I’d be worried if the same or similar dynamics is now happening absent such a threat (as that implies the bad dynamics and epistemic conditions it imposes might never go away or might keep recurring for no good reason).
think the next step is “actually go do real empiricism” before trying to Do Something About It.
Sure, and I’m hoping that someone has ideas about how to do such empiricism, for people in our positions (i.e., not an academic who might be able to apply for a grant to study this).
My understanding is that Texas is still printing textbooks that do ‘evolution is just a theory’ and don’t mention the age of the universe (and that this has been consistent for the past few decades, and Texas is a large enough market that it distorts overall textbook trends)
Here’s the latest story I found about Texas schools and evolution. After reading it, I think the religious influence described is trivial compared to what’s happening in “progressive” school districts. (I’m not going to link to or describe in detail what I’m seeing, for fear of drawing unwanted attention, but I’ll send it to you via PM.)
The fundamental difference seems to be that most biology teachers have not signed up for teaching religious fundamentalism and their university training didn’t teach them that ideal but critical theory is deep in the university curriculum for teachers.
I didn’t forget about Christianity but think we’d have to go back pretty far to see as much influence from it in journalism, academia, K-12 education (our main epistemic institutions) as we see today from leftist ideology. Curious if you have a different take on this.
“blacklisting communists” was in response to a rather obvious real threat, and I’d be worried if the same or similar dynamics is now happening absent such a threat (as that implies the bad dynamics and epistemic conditions it imposes might never go away or might keep recurring for no good reason).
Sure, and I’m hoping that someone has ideas about how to do such empiricism, for people in our positions (i.e., not an academic who might be able to apply for a grant to study this).
My understanding is that Texas is still printing textbooks that do ‘evolution is just a theory’ and don’t mention the age of the universe (and that this has been consistent for the past few decades, and Texas is a large enough market that it distorts overall textbook trends)
Here’s the latest story I found about Texas schools and evolution. After reading it, I think the religious influence described is trivial compared to what’s happening in “progressive” school districts. (I’m not going to link to or describe in detail what I’m seeing, for fear of drawing unwanted attention, but I’ll send it to you via PM.)
The fundamental difference seems to be that most biology teachers have not signed up for teaching religious fundamentalism and their university training didn’t teach them that ideal but critical theory is deep in the university curriculum for teachers.