Sociology of Scientific Orthodoxy
A branch of sociology that examines how scientific orthodoxies are socially constructed, maintained, challenged, and transformed—focusing on the institutions, practices, power relations, and social dynamics that shape what counts as orthodox in science. The sociology of scientific orthodoxy investigates how consensus forms through social processes (networks, conferences, peer review), how orthodoxy is maintained through institutional mechanisms (funding, publishing, hiring, promotion), how dissenters are marginalized or incorporated, and how orthodoxies eventually shift through social as well as intellectual dynamics. It also examines the role of status, prestige, and authority in shaping who gets to define orthodoxy; the relationship between scientific orthodoxy and broader social forces (politics, economics, culture); and the ways that orthodoxies can persist even in the face of contrary evidence because of social inertia. The sociology of scientific orthodoxy reveals that what counts as "settled science" is never just a matter of evidence—it's always also a matter of social agreement, institutional power, and community dynamics.
Example: "Her sociology of scientific orthodoxy research showed how a particular theory became dominant not because it was better supported, but because its proponents controlled key journals, trained most of the graduate students, and sat on all the important funding committees. The science was real, but so was the social power."
Sociology of Scientific Orthodoxy by Abzugal March 16, 2026
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