2 pointsby HR018 hours ago2 comments
  • Murugaverl6 hours ago
    The Claude explanation of why the omission happens is the most interesting part: naming conventions determine epistemic visibility. A field named for its questions (philosophy, political science) reads as universal; a field named for a population reads as particular, even when the population in question was forced to work the universal questions harder than anyone.

    This is a real problem in how academic disciplines get taxonomized. Library classification, department structures, grant categories, syllabi recommendations they all sort by the field's nominal category, not by its actual question set. African American Studies lands under "area/ethnic studies" in most university org charts and JSTOR classifications, which means automated searches for "who is asking about self-government" genuinely miss it. This isn't (only) ideological blindness. It's an indexing failure that ideological assumptions built into the index.

  • andirk7 hours ago
    Can I get a TLDR?