Systematic bias: Difference between revisions

1,092 bytes added ,  25 December 2003
what it is, why it's not systemic bias, how it's been addressed
(what it is, what it gives rise to)
 
(what it is, why it's not systemic bias, how it's been addressed)
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[[Groupthink]] and the [[echo chamber]] are the natural result of an unaddressed systematic bias.  While a group may have a [[systemic bias]] to accepting the outputs of such phenomena as "real", it takes a lack of process for them to accept those outputs as being viable [[consensus decision-making]].  Thus only a disciplined notion of such decision making can alleviate the systematic bias.
[[Groupthink]] and the [[echo chamber]] are the natural result of an unaddressed systematic bias.  While a group may have a [[systemic bias]] to accepting the outputs of such phenomena as "real", it takes a lack of process for them to accept those outputs as being viable [[consensus decision-making]].  Thus only a disciplined notion of such decision making can alleviate the systematic bias.
This is such a serious problem that some very respected thinkers have concluded that only a separation of [[w:epistemic community]] by [[value system]] can be effective in creating "objective" categories.  The most famous examples being the burning of "pagan" texts by Christians, the development by Marxists and some syndicalists of a "working class" specific education system, various social and alternate histories from feminism, and recently and less famously the [[w:Islamization of knowledge]] proposed by the Palestinian Ismail al-Faruqi.  In all these cases, people sharing a value system would be expected to share ethical principles as well, and those would guide their categorizations - this seems obvious for ethics and law, but is it also true for ''all'' facts?
There are over one thousand librarian-created categorization schemes in the largest collections of these.  This suggests strongly that there is no single hierarchy of classification of knowledge, and that each means of agreeing on a single hierarchy is probably itself evidence of yet another systematic bias.
Anonymous user