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Evidence Bigotry

A specific form of Proof Bigotry centered on the demand for “evidence” rather than “proof,” though the effect is the same: whatever the target offers is declared insufficient, and the target themselves is pathologized. The evidence bigot often combines evidentiary demands with psychiatric slurs: “show me evidence or it’s delusional,” “that’s pseudoscience, you need a psychiatrist,” “you’re almost schizophrenic for believing this.” The goal is to make the target’s worldview seem not just unsupported but clinically disordered. Evidence bigotry weaponizes the language of science and mental health to delegitimize entire traditions and identities.
Example: “When she shared her indigenous healing practices, he replied: ‘Show me evidence or it’s delusion. You might be schizophrenic.’ Evidence bigotry: demanding RCTs for cultural practices while pathologizing the practitioner.”
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Evidence Bigotry

A focused form of bigotry centered on the demand for “evidence” as a tool of exclusion, often combined with psychiatric pathologization. The evidence bigot says things like “show me evidence or it’s delusional,” “that’s pseudoscience, you need a psychiatrist,” or “without evidence, you’re schizophrenic.” It weaponizes both scientific authority and mental health labels to silence spiritual, religious, or metaphysical beliefs. Unlike mere skepticism, evidence bigotry targets people, not claims, and its goal is humiliation and exclusion, not understanding. It is rampant in online atheist and skeptic communities.
Example: “She mentioned her meditation practice; he replied ‘that’s pseudoscience, you’re delusional, see a psychiatrist.’ Evidence bigotry: using clinical labels as insults to enforce materialism.”

Evidence Prejudice

The cognitive bias behind evidence bigotry: an automatic dismissal of any belief or practice that does not meet the prejudiced person’s evidentiary standards, combined with a tendency to pathologize the believer. Evidence prejudice operates quickly, often without conscious reflection: “no evidence, so it’s nonsense.” It is especially common in debates about spirituality, alternative medicine, and parapsychology. While not always malicious, it shuts down dialogue and reinforces the prejudice that only measurable, replicable phenomena are real.

Example: “He heard ‘energy healing’ and immediately said ‘there’s no evidence for that.’ He hadn’t looked; evidence prejudice, assuming absence of evidence is evidence of absence.”

Scientific Evidence Bigotry

A form of bigotry that weaponizes the concept of “scientific evidence” to dismiss, humiliate, or exclude individuals, beliefs, or practices that do not meet a narrow, often impossibly strict evidentiary standard. The perpetrator demands peer‑reviewed studies, randomized controlled trials, or reproducible measurements for domains where such evidence may be inappropriate (e.g., historical events, personal experiences, spiritual beliefs) and then uses the lack of such evidence to label the target as irrational, delusional, or fraudulent. Unlike legitimate skepticism, scientific evidence bigotry is applied selectively, ignores the limitations of evidence itself, and often serves to enforce a materialist worldview as the only legitimate one.
Example: “He demanded a double‑blind study to prove her indigenous healing practice worked, then called her a charlatan when she couldn’t produce one—scientific evidence bigotry, using the rhetoric of evidence to erase other ways of knowing.”

Scientific Evidence Prejudice

A cognitive bias that reflexively dismisses any claim not accompanied by what the biased person considers “scientific evidence,” often without considering whether such evidence is possible or relevant. The prejudiced person assumes that lack of published studies equals falsehood, that anecdotal or experiential knowledge is worthless, and that anyone who cannot produce evidence on demand is intellectually deficient. Scientific evidence prejudice operates as a shortcut to avoid engaging with unfamiliar or challenging ideas, and it disproportionately affects marginalized knowledge systems (indigenous, spiritual, experiential).

Example: “When she described her chronic pain, he said ‘that’s just anecdotal, show me a study’—scientific evidence prejudice, demanding clinical proof for lived experience.”

Evidence-Based Bigotry

The use of scientific evidence—or appeals to evidence—to justify prejudice, discrimination, or violence against people whose beliefs, practices, or identities fall outside evidence‑based frameworks. Evidence‑based bigotry cherry‑picks studies that support predetermined biases, weaponizes the concept of “burden of proof” to demand impossible standards from marginalized groups, and frames any defense of non‑scientific practices as “anti‑science.” It is often deployed in debates about indigenous rights, religious accommodation, and alternative medicine, where the rhetoric of evidence masks deeper social and cultural hostility.
Evidence-Based Bigotry Example: “He cited a single study to claim that acupuncture was ‘dangerous quackery’ and that its practitioners were ‘harming the vulnerable’—Evidence‑Based Bigotry, using selective data to justify cultural erasure.”

Evidence-Based Bigotry

The use of scientific evidence—or appeals to evidence—to justify prejudice, discrimination, or violence against people whose beliefs, practices, or identities fall outside evidence‑based frameworks. Evidence‑based bigotry cherry‑picks studies that support predetermined biases, weaponizes the concept of “burden of proof” to demand impossible standards from marginalized groups, and frames any defense of non‑scientific practices as “anti‑science.” It is often deployed in debates about indigenous rights, religious accommodation, and alternative medicine, where the rhetoric of evidence masks deeper social and cultural hostility.
EEvidence-Based Bigotry xample: “He cited a single study to claim that acupuncture was ‘dangerous quackery’ and that its practitioners were ‘harming the vulnerable’—Evidence‑Based Bigotry, using selective data to justify cultural erasure.”

Evidence-Based Bigotry

A form of bigotry that uses the language and authority of “evidence” to justify prejudice, exclusion, or harm. The evidence‑based bigot demands “evidence” for claims made by marginalized groups, sets impossibly high standards, and then uses the failure to meet those standards as proof that the group is irrational or fraudulent. It is often deployed against religious, spiritual, or indigenous beliefs, but also against survivors of trauma, whose testimony is dismissed as “anecdotal.” Evidence‑based bigotry weaponizes the rhetoric of empiricism while ignoring the limits and biases of evidence itself.
Evidence-Based Bigotry Example: “He demanded double‑blind studies to prove her experience of discrimination, then said ‘no evidence, so it didn’t happen.’ Evidence‑based bigotry: using science to gaslight.”

Evidence-Based Prejudice

A reflexive tendency to dismiss any claim that is not accompanied by “evidence” in the form preferred by the prejudiced person, without necessarily engaging in active hostility. Evidence‑based prejudice operates as a cognitive filter: if there’s no peer‑reviewed study, the claim is automatically suspect. It is common in online debates, where one side demands “source?” and treats the absence of an immediate citation as proof of falsehood. Unlike bigotry, it may not be malicious, but it still shuts down genuine inquiry and privileges already‑studied topics over emergent or marginal knowledge.

Example: “She made an observation based on her years of fieldwork; he asked for a citation. Evidence‑based prejudice: treating personal expertise as worthless without a published paper.”