Epistemological Sociology
The specific analysis of group dynamics as they relate to knowledge and belief, exploring how communities develop shared standards for what counts as true. It examines the phenomenon of "group epistemology," where entire communities agree that certain sources are trustworthy (doctors) and others are not (also doctors, depending on the community). It explores how groups enforce epistemic norms (you will cite the right sources or you will be exiled), how knowledge hierarchies form (PhD holders at the top, Twitter influencers somewhere in the middle), and how communities respond to information that challenges their shared beliefs (usually by rejecting it).
Example: "At the conspiracy theory convention, a fascinating example of epistemological sociology occurred. The attendees, who prided themselves on questioning official narratives, had developed their own rigid hierarchy of trusted sources, with obscure blogs at the top and mainstream media at the bottom. They were epistemologically identical to the mainstream they rejected, just with different authorities."
Epistemological Sociology by Abzugal February 14, 2026
Get the Epistemological Sociology mug.