Epistemology Metabiases
Second-order biases about epistemology itself—systematic distortions in how we study knowledge. Epistemology Metabiases include: assuming Western epistemology is epistemology, not one tradition; treating knowledge as individual rather than social; focusing on propositional knowledge while ignoring procedural, tacit, experiential; believing that epistemological questions are timeless rather than historical; ignoring the role of power in knowledge production. Epistemology Metabiases shape what questions get asked, what counts as an answer, and who gets to be an epistemologist.
Epistemology Metabiases "Your epistemology class only studied Descartes to Kant. That's Epistemology Metabias—treating Western philosophy as the whole story. Epistemology means study of knowledge, not study of European theories of knowledge. The metabias is thinking your tradition is the tradition, not one tradition among many."
Epistemology Metabiases by Dumu The Void March 1, 2026
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