
“Not So Irrelevant: The Epistemic Significance of Social Identity”
New article by Anna Brinkerhoff (Concordia University) entitled “Not So Irrelevant: The Epistemic Significance of Social Identity”, published by Dialogue: Canadian Philosophical Review.
Summary
Our social identity affects what we believe. But, how should we epistemically evaluate this doxastic impact? Achieving a robust picture of the epistemic significance of social identity requires us to explore the understudied intersection of irrelevant influences and standpoint epistemology, which leads us to cases of double higher-order evidence. Reflecting on social identity through the lens of irrelevant influences gives us higher-order evidence of error, while reflecting through the lens of standpoint advantage gives us higher-order evidence of accuracy. We must weigh the strength of each piece of higher-order evidence case by case to epistemically evaluate the doxastic impact of social identity.