Michael Schmitz
5.4K posts

Michael Schmitz
@Modemichael
Philosopher of mind, language and society. FWF-project "What is in a question?" at CEU. Tweets about philosophy, science, politics and their intersections.


@EveryDarkStar1 @Cary_Bleasdale @zenahitz Newton spent a lot his time working on alchemy lol he was definitely confused about some things



A few years ago I recorded an episode of my podcast Forbidden Territory for @UGent (in Dutch) about the heritability of IQ. We also touched on the third rail of racial differences. Why? Because I believe academics should be free to investigate even the most “dangerous ideas.” My guest, Han van der Maas (a renowned IQ researcher at the University of Amsterdam), explained that individual IQ differences are highly heritable, but that he does not believe in differences between racial groups. His statistical and methodological arguments (e.g. Simpson paradox) convinced me at the time. Still, he hedged his bets: it remains possible that future evidence might show racial differences. And researchers should be free to investigate that hypothesis. Forty-five colleagues from my former philosophy department apparently think otherwise. They are urging the rector to fire @nathancofnas because he claims that the IQ gap between racial groups (such as whites and blacks in the US — differences that are themselves not disputed) may have partly genetic causes, rather than purely social ones like marginalization or discrimination. They label this “pseudoscience and racism.” I understand why many people are shocked by Cofnas’s claims. But this clearly falls within the scope of academic freedom. For years, the psychoanalysis of Jacques Lacan was taught and researched at my department — a complete pseudoscience. Dozens of theses and PhDs were written about it, all scientifically worthless. No one batted an eye. Unlike my colleagues, I published several papers explaining why (Lacanian) psychoanalysis is pseudoscientific (drive.google.com/file/d/0B_K-qt…). Yet I never demanded that my colleagues be fired. None of the signatories have any peer-reviewed publications on IQ or genetics. I have a letter recommending Cofnas' work on IQ from the editor-in-chief of the prestigious journal Intelligence. Even if the hypothesis of racial IQ differences could be shown to belong to the realm of pseudoscience, that still would not justify dismissal. If @UGent caves in to this demand, it will be another blow to academic freedom at my alma mater — following the new rector’s illiberal statements suggesting that researchers questioning the safety of vaccines or the Gaza “genocide” are “crossing a line that must not be crossed.” Such calls for dismissal from people without any expertise are also strategically unwise, as they only fuel “red-pilling.” When academics appear determined to suppress a dangerous idea at all costs, people understandably get suspicious: "What are they trying to hide?" And so trust in academia erodes further. youtube.com/watch?v=YHhbWm…





AKWs zu bauen ist teuer - und teurer als erwartet - und dauert deutlich länger als ursprünglich geplant. Es macht einfach mehr Sinn in andere Lösungen zu investieren, als bspw. zu ein AKW für 2030 zu planen für 4 Mrd. €, das dann 20 Mrd. € kostet und erst 2044 fertig ist.


Judith Butler is a perfect exemplar of the parasitic rot in academia. A degenerate buffoon that has contributed nothing to knowledge other than to perhaps serve as a promulgator of intellectual terrorism (aka postmodernist gibberish).





It’s great that social scientists are doing adversarial collaborations. We started doing that in philosophy 2500 years ago.



















