Neuroscientistic Defaultism
A more ideologically charged version of neuroscientific defaultism, where scientism (the belief that science is the only source of genuine knowledge) is applied specifically to neuroscience. It holds that any claim about mind, behavior, or society must be validated by neuroscientific methods to be considered real or meaningful. Insights from psychology, sociology, or the humanities are dismissed as “soft” or “anecdotal” unless they can be “translated” into brain scans. Neuroscientistic defaultism often appears in debates about free will, consciousness, or morality, where brain imaging is treated as the final arbiter of truth.
Example: “He demanded an fMRI study to prove that people had moral intuitions—neuroscientistic defaultism, refusing to accept philosophical or behavioral evidence unless it came with a brain picture.”
Neuroscientistic Defaultism by Abzugal April 18, 2026
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