RCP  February 18, 2016 
 
Scientific American
February 2016
 
 
Is Social Science Politically  Biased?
 
Political Bias Corrupts Social  Science
Michael Shermer
 
 
[ During ]the past couple of years imbroglios erupted on college campuses  
across the U.S. over trigger warnings (for example, alerting students to 
scenes  of abuse and violence in The Great Gatsby before assigning it),  
microaggressions (saying “I believe the most qualified person should get the  
job”
), cultural appropriation (a white woman wearing her hair in cornrows),  
speaker disinvitations (Brandeis University canceling plans to award Ayaan 
Hirsi  Ali an honorary degree because of her criticism of Islam's treatment of 
women),  safe spaces (such as rooms where students can go after a talk that 
has upset  them), and social justice advocates competing to signal their 
moral outrage over  such issues as Halloween costumes (last year at Yale 
University). Why such  unrest in the most liberal institutions in the country?  
Although there are many proximate causes, there is but one ultimate  cause—
lack of political diversity to provide checks on protests going too far. A  
2014 study conducted by the University of California, Los Angeles, Higher  
Education Research Institute found that 59.8 percent of all undergraduate  
faculty nationwide identify as far left or liberal, compared with only 12.8  
percent as far right or conservative. The asymmetry is much worse in the 
social  sciences. A 2015 study by psychologist José Duarte, then at Arizona 
State  University, and his colleagues in Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 
entitled 
 “Political Diversity Will Improve Social Psychological Science,” found 
that 58  to 66 percent of social scientists are liberal and only 5 to 8 
percent  conservative and that there are eight Democrats for every Republican. 
The 
 problem is most relevant to the study of areas “related to the political  
concerns of the Left—areas such as race, gender, stereotyping, 
environmentalism,  power, and inequality.” The very things these students are 
protesting. 
How does this political asymmetry corrupt social science? It begins with 
what  subjects are studied and the descriptive language employed. Consider a 
2003  paper by social psychologist John Jost, now at New York University, and 
his  colleagues, entitled “Political Conservatism as Motivated Social 
Cognition.”  Conservatives are described as having “uncertainty avoidance,” “
needs for order,  structure, and closure,” as well as “dogmatism and 
intolerance of ambiguity,” as  if these constitute a mental disease that leads 
to “
resistance to change” and  “endorsement of inequality.” Yet one could just 
as easily characterize liberals  as suffering from a host of equally 
malfunctioning cognitive states: a lack of  moral compass that leads to an 
inability to make clear ethical choices, a  pathological fear of clarity that 
leads 
to indecisiveness, a naive belief that  all people are equally talented, and 
a blind adherence in the teeth of  contradictory evidence from behavior 
genetics that culture and environment  exclusively determine one's lot in life. 
Duarte et al. find similar distortive language across the social sciences,  
where, for instance, certain words are used to suggest pernicious motives 
when  confronting contradictory evidence—“deny,” “legitimize,” “
rationalize,”  “justify,” “defend,” “trivialize”—with conservatives as 
examples, 
as if liberals  are always objective and rational. In one test item, for 
example, the  “endorsement of the efficacy of hard work” was interpreted as an 
example of  “rationalization of inequality.” Imagine a study in which 
conservative values  were assumed to be scientific facts and disagreement with 
them was treated as  irrational, the authors conjecture counterfactually. “In 
this field, scholars  might regularly publish studies on ... ‘the denial of 
the benefits of a strong  military’ or ‘the denial of the benefits of 
church attendance.’” The authors  present evidence that “embedding any type of 
ideological values into measures is  dangerous to science” and is “much more 
likely to happen—and to go unchallenged  by dissenters—in a politically 
homogeneous field.”
 
...scoring high in “right-wing authoritarianism” were found to be “more  
likely to go along with the unethical decisions of leaders.” Example: “not  
formally taking a female colleague's side in her sexual harassment complaint 
 against her subordinate (given little information about the case).” Maybe 
what  this finding really means is that conservatives believe in examining 
evidence  first, instead of prejudging by gender. Call it “left-wing 
authoritarianism.”  
The authors' solution to the political bias problem is right out of the  
liberal playbook: diversity. Not just ethnic, race and gender but viewpoint  
diversity. All of us are biased, and few of us can see it in ourselves, so we 
 depend on others to challenge us. As John Stuart Mill noted in that 
greatest  defense of free speech, On Liberty, “He who knows only his own side 
of  
the case, knows little of that.”  

 
Michael  Shermer

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