Epistemological Moralism
The practice of using epistemological standards—claims about what counts as knowledge, evidence, or justification—as tools of moral judgment and exclusion. Epistemological moralism condemns not just what people believe but how they claim to know it, treating different ways of knowing as moral failings rather than cultural differences. It's the anthropologist who dismisses indigenous knowledge as "unscientific" and therefore illegitimate; the philosopher who treats anyone who can't articulate their epistemology as intellectually bankrupt; the scientist who treats non-quantitative evidence as morally suspect. Epistemological moralism turns questions of method into questions of character, making epistemology a weapon rather than a tool.
Example: "He didn't just disagree with her knowledge claims—he treated her way of knowing as a moral failing, a sign of insufficient rigor. Epistemological Moralism: using standards of evidence as standards of virtue."
Epistemological Moralism by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
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