I don’t think we should police thoughts, only actions.
We don’t make it a crime to fantasize about killing someone—you only become a criminal when you act on those thoughts. This illustrates a useful and widely applied principle of our legal system. The willingness of some diversity advocates to disregard this principle is a good example of diversity advocates getting overzealous about diversity and sacrificing other values, as I complain about in this comment.
Furthermore, I don’t think condemning people for having beliefs we don’t want is an effective way to change those beliefs—a varietyofresearch seems to indicate this doesn’t work (though, I generally don’t put too much stock in social psychology research, which includes those links, and I’m also not a good paper scrutinizer).
The problem is that those thoughts, as I noted, become actions, just actions we can usually only see as systematic trends. Just because someone does not say “women are incompetent” does not mean they aren’t underestimating women’s competence and e.g. hiring them less than he should. Taking action on this just requires a more systematic approach than explicit discrimination does.
I agree that in terms of what works, just pointing out bias doesn’t seem to help and can even backfire, as I mentioned, which is why I provided a list of other possible solutions.
The problem is that those thoughts… become actions… we can usually only see as systematic trends. Just because someone does not say “women are incompetent” does not mean they aren’t underestimating women’s competence and e.g. hiring them less than he should.
The flip side of it being hard to discern whether people have bad thoughts and act biasedly except by drawing inferences from broader patterns is that it’s also hard to discern whether people actually do have bad thoughts and acted biasedly from those broader patterns. (c.f. the many fields where women dominate men in terms of prevalence and performance, as well as EAs many other demographic biases which don’t receive the same treatment e.g. a 14:1 left-right bias, and a 4:1 20-35:any age over 35 bias).
I don’t think we should police thoughts, only actions.
We don’t make it a crime to fantasize about killing someone—you only become a criminal when you act on those thoughts. This illustrates a useful and widely applied principle of our legal system. The willingness of some diversity advocates to disregard this principle is a good example of diversity advocates getting overzealous about diversity and sacrificing other values, as I complain about in this comment.
Furthermore, I don’t think condemning people for having beliefs we don’t want is an effective way to change those beliefs—a variety of research seems to indicate this doesn’t work (though, I generally don’t put too much stock in social psychology research, which includes those links, and I’m also not a good paper scrutinizer).
The problem is that those thoughts, as I noted, become actions, just actions we can usually only see as systematic trends. Just because someone does not say “women are incompetent” does not mean they aren’t underestimating women’s competence and e.g. hiring them less than he should. Taking action on this just requires a more systematic approach than explicit discrimination does.
I agree that in terms of what works, just pointing out bias doesn’t seem to help and can even backfire, as I mentioned, which is why I provided a list of other possible solutions.
The flip side of it being hard to discern whether people have bad thoughts and act biasedly except by drawing inferences from broader patterns is that it’s also hard to discern whether people actually do have bad thoughts and acted biasedly from those broader patterns. (c.f. the many fields where women dominate men in terms of prevalence and performance, as well as EAs many other demographic biases which don’t receive the same treatment e.g. a 14:1 left-right bias, and a 4:1 20-35:any age over 35 bias).