Second-order biases within scientific practice—how scientists think about their own biases, methods, and assumptions. Scientific Metabiases include: believing that method eliminates bias rather than just channeling it; assuming peer review catches everything; treating replication as a cure-all rather than another site of bias; thinking that quantification ensures objectivity; believing that awareness of bias makes you immune. Scientific Metabiases are the blind spots in science's self-understanding—the ways scientists misrecognize their own practice.
Scientific Metabiases "We have peer review, so we're objective!" That's Scientific Metabias—confusing a process with a guarantee. Peer review has its own biases; it doesn't eliminate them. The metabias is thinking institutional procedures make you bias-free, when they just change where the bias lives. Science is human; metabias is forgetting that."
by Dumu The Void March 1, 2026
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