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The principle that certain scientific positions are granted unearned authority—privileged not because they're better supported but because they're associated with dominant institutions, funders, or research traditions. The Law of Privileged Scientific Position argues that some research gets funded, published, and cited by default; other research struggles for recognition. This privilege shapes what counts as science, what questions get asked, what answers are accepted. The law calls for examining why certain positions are privileged, who benefits, and what's excluded. It's the foundation of scientific humility, of the recognition that your position's privilege may have nothing to do with its truth.
Example: "Her research, done in community with marginalized populations, was ignored. His research, funded by corporations, was celebrated. The Law of Privileged Scientific Position explained why: his position was privileged, associated with power, with funding, with prestige. Hers wasn't. The difference wasn't evidence; it was privilege. She kept working, hoping that someday privilege would matter less."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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