Should we stop using the term “pseudoscience”?

Pseudoscience cartoonThe term “pseudoscience” is obviously pejorative. Nobody wishes whatever he does to be labeled with that appellative. Recently, Katie Burke has written an essay for American Scientist arguing that we should drop it altogether. It isn’t the first time someone makes this suggestion, and I’m betting it won’t be the last one. Here is why Burke and others are wrong.

Pseudoscience refers to “any body of knowledge that purports to be scientific or to be supported by science but which fails to comply with the scientific method,” though since there is no such thing as the scientific method, I would rather modify the above to read “with currently accepted scientific standards.”

This is an important point, since scientific standards change through time — as they ought to, if science makes progress — so that a certain body of evidence may fit such standards at one point, but not later on. Take, for instance, phrenology. One can reasonably argue that it was a notion to be debated in the early part of the 19th century, when it was popular. But anyone practicing phrenology today would unquestionably be relegated to the category of a pseudoscientist.

The term pseudoscience apparently originated in 1796, when James Pettit Andrews and Robert Henry used it in their History of Great Britain, from the death of Henry viii. to the accession of James vi. of Scotland to the crown of England: “The fantastical pseudo-science of alchemy has in all ages had its numerous votaries.”

Back to Burke’s essay, which takes its cue from media reports labeling swimmer Michael Phelps’ use of “cupping” as pseudoscience (and rightly so). Burke says we shouldn’t use the label because “it is divisive and lacks agreed-upon scientific or journalistic norms, so the evidence justifying its use is unclear. Furthermore, its cultural meanings come along with a flawed history of use for defamation.”

Let’s stop here for a second and unpack that passage. The fact that a term is divisive is irrelevant to whether journalists or anyone else should use it. “Liberal” (or “conservative”) is a highly divisive term, but it does identify two broadly distinct — if varied — constituencies of people, whose interests, ideologies, and behavior at the poll are in fact statistically well differentiated from each other.

Further, I’m not sure where Burke gets the idea that the term lacks scientific (or, more properly, philosophical) normativity, since there is a large literature on pseudoscience — including my co-edited (with Maarten Boudry) collection of essays, which she cites, likely without having read it — establishing precisely such norms.

As for journalistic standards, I wonder whether journalists have “norms” for the use of any other divisive term, such as liberal, conservative, pro-choice, pro-life, race, and so forth. If so, I’d like to know where such norms are published, and on whose authorities they are being deployed.

Finally, yes, “pseudoscience” has been used to defame certain notions, though we’ll return in a minute to Burke’s questionable examples of such defamations, but — again — so have plenty of other terms that journalists keep using nonetheless, like all of those listed in the previous paragraph.

Burke continues: “The term pseudoscience inherently creates this framing, pitting those who believe in ‘real’ science against those who believe in ‘fake’ science. But these discussions really indicate whom we trust.”

Well, yes, because there are such people. Vaccines are “real” science, antivaxx rhetoric is not. Astronomy is “real” science, astrology is not. And so forth. I get that the people who find themselves on the “pseudo” side of that divide won’t like it, but life is tough, isn’t it?

“With the hindsight of history it is clear that what exactly was labeled pseudoscience in both popular media and scholarly studies had as much to do with culture and ideology as it did with logic and fact.”

Here Burke links to a book chapter that talks about phrenology, which is an odd example to pick, since as I said before, it’s evolution from debatable science to pseudoscience is both typical and expected. Some notions begin as outright pseudoscience (see antivaxx), and others start out as plausible and provisionally acceptable and then descend into what Maarten and I informally refer to as the “pseudoscience black hole.” (It’s a black hole because it’s hard to find historical examples of a notion that, once it began to be labeled as pseudoscience, emerged back out into the area of acceptable science. If anyone can think of counterexamples we’d like to hear about them.)

Next, Burke provides her readers with three more examples of allegedly questionable use of “pseudoscience”: many (but unspecified) areas of psychology, continental drift, and eugenics. The latter is in the same category as phrenology, i.e., a notion that originally held some degree of scientific credibility — at the time of Francis Galton — and then slid into pseudoscience, so it doesn’t represent a problem for my account.

The other two are interesting. I am not aware of Richard Wegener’s theory of continental drift ever having been labeled pseudoscience, tough it might have. It was, for sure, a controversial theory for a number of reasons, including the lack of a mechanism underlying it. Eventually it became accepted and is firmly entrenched in modern geology — so that if someone did call it pseudoscience, the label doesn’t seem to have brought about long lasting negative effects.

The unspecified “areas of psychology” bit in Burke’s article has a link, which leads to a book chapter that refers to a hodgepodge of notions, including IQ measurements, Skinnerian behaviorism, and parapsychology. The latter is clearly considered pseudoscience by a consensus of competent researchers, while the other two are, respectively, controversial (politically as well as scientifically) and superseded (as a scientific theory).

Sure, someone, somewhere, has used the term “pseudoscience” where it doesn’t seem to properly belong. I don’t think that the concept of IQ is pseudoscientific, it is more likely only marginally relevant to the study of intelligence; and I don’t think Skinner was a pseudoscientist either, but his ideas have indeed been superseded by developments in cognitive science over the last several decades.

Again, though, if we stopped using a word because someone misapplies it for ideological reasons, we would have to excise a good portion of our dictionaries. It is far better to engage in a case-by-case discussion and inquire into the validity of this or that label, given currently acceptable epistemic standards.

I’d also like to notice that the examples mentioned by Burke are taken from a book entitled Deconstructing Social Psychology, which has a distinctly postmodern flavor to it (including a chapter on something called “psychoanalytic feminism,” whatever that is).

Burke then goes on to cite a 2011 dissertation by Paul Lawrie that argues that “dismissing… scientific racism as ‘pseudo-science,’ or a perversion of the scientific method, blurs our understanding of its role as a tool of racial labor control in modern America.”

Maybe it does, maybe it doesn’t. But scientific racism is a pseudoscience, and it is widely recognized — again by the relevant epistemic community — as such. The political use of pseudoscience is a very interesting topic, but one that seems to me entirely distinct from whether a notion is or is not pseudoscientific. After all, actual science also has political uses, sometimes positive, sometimes nefarious.

“The cries about pseudoscience and quackery were generally made with good scientific intentions, and they were often biased in favor of the convictions and interests of doctors and scientists. But because the group of people who tended to make such proclamations has lacked diversity over the past centuries — €”and still does today — €”their defamatory rhetorical context has a history of being culturally insensitive and even misinformed.”

The link accompanying that bit? To literature on “indigenous science.” I may have more to say about this particular topic soon, since I’ve been invited to a conference in Canada early next year on attempts to teach indigenous medicine in university curricula, but for now I maintain that there is no such thing as Native American, or Chinese, or whatever, science. There are bodies of local knowledge, which should be (and often are, nowadays) appreciated for what they are but still need to be subjected to the more rigorous standards of systematic observations and controlled experiments. Those are the standards that help us figure out whether a notion has theoretical or empirical validity or not. And what characterizes a pseudoscientific stand is the insistence on passing for science notions that have, in fact, repeatedly failed those standards — regardless of which ethnic group, gender, political group, and so forth originally proposed those notions.

At this point Burke shifts gears and links the use of pseudoscience with the defense of the ideology of scientism, going so far as suggesting that “perhaps the assault the Christian Right has waged on many aspects of science education and funding in the United States represents just such a backlash.”

Well, if it does, I’d like to see some solid empirical evidence of that causal link.

But the author does have a point concerning a connection between scientism and pseudoscience. As I will argue in a chapter of a forthcoming collection also co-edited with Maarten Boudry, on the varieties of scientism (out next year by Chicago Press) in some sense pseudoscience and scientism are mirror images of each other, each the offspring of a priori ideological positions, not of sound empirical investigation or cogent philosophical arguments.

Burke concludes with a series of alternative suggestions to the use of pseudoscience, so let’s take a look.

“One can simply state what kind of scientific evidence is available … if scientific evidence directly contradicts a claim, saying so outright is much stronger than if a fuzzy term like pseudoscience is used … if fraudulent behavior is suspected, such allegations are best stated overtly rather than veiled under the word pseudoscience; [we should be] replacing pseudoscience with descriptors such as emerging and still-experimental, as yet scientifically inconclusive, scientifically debated, and lacking scientific evidence [or, when appropriate] fraud (suspected or proven), fabrication, misinformation, factually baseless claims, and scientifically unfounded claims.”

But we, in fact, already do all of that! Except that some ideas don’t simply “lack scientific evidence,” and yet they are not “fraud or fabrication,” nor are they simply the result of “misinformation,” and they are certainly not “still-experimental.” They are, well, pseudoscientific!

Look, I get it: labeling something a pseudoscience carries the danger of alienating people and of discouraging research into potentially interesting areas. But not doing so also carries risks, in particular that of lending legitimacy to notions that shouldn’t have it, some of which notions are positively dangerous for people’s health (homeopathy, antivaxx) or even the future of the planet (climate change denialism). So it isn’t a question of not labeling, but rather of labeling as accurately as possible, and of supporting whatever label one wishes to use (including that of “science” or “scientific”) with good arguments and solid empirical evidence.

189 thoughts on “Should we stop using the term “pseudoscience”?

  1. synred

    SG:

    “Animal husbandry doesn’t breed, or claim to breed, for intellectual traits.”

    Sheep dogs!

    Complex multi-loci traits can be breed for, indeed it’s more practical than engineering them.

    Not everything we shouldn’t do, needs to be impossible to do. Life might be easier were it so.

    Where is that God fella when ya’ need ‘im?

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  2. brodix

    Then there is “truthiness” and “proofiness” as examples of scientism being used as a cover for outright chicanery.

    Possibly pseudoscience is too broad/generic a term and should be broken into various forms, such as proto-sciences, that tried, but failed, snake oil type sciences, that were/are designed to deceive for economic reasons, mysticism/paranormal, etc.

    Given physical theorists are proposing going beyond testability as a scientific criteria, it does seem some deeper review will eventually have to be considered as to degrees of scientific validity.

    Where does astrology end and string theory begin?

    Unfortunately money and careerism are some of the biggest enablers.

    Liked by 4 people

  3. Robin Herbert

    I think that the latest New Scientist cover story on how scientists allegedly deal with the problems of metaphysics would be a prime candidate for the term “pseudo-philosophy”. If the contents of the article are anything to go by then the answer is that scientists deal with the problems of metaphysics badly. Very, very badly.

    And calm down Coel, I said “If the contents of the article are anything to go by …”. It is a long time since I thought the contents of a New Scientist article were anything to go by.

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  4. Massimo Post author

    Astro,

    Right, I should have answered that yes, you are wrong in that supposition, apologies!

    “My point of course is that lacking a good definition of science the definition of pseudoscience seems necessarily tendentious.”

    Science, just like pseudoscience, as well as any other interestingly concept concept, is inherently fuzzy, Wittgenstein-style. We understand it and can meaningfully talk about it, but chasing after rigorous definitions based on a small set of necessary and jointly sufficient conditions is a fool’s errand.

    “What type of inquiry is not epistemologically privileged, ‘in its proper domain’?”

    Theology, since it’s domain is empty. There are also proper domains where however we seem to have trouble coming up with epistemically reliably access, like in economics and other social sciences.

    So, Dan, no, I don’t think Astro has a good point either. And of course there is both pseudo-art and pseudo-philosophy, but I’m not going to name names because I don’t want to get muddled in that sort of argument.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Robin Herbert

    I think that we should avoid using the term just as an insult. But I think it is descriptive of certain kinds of things – like Intelligent Design, where there is a definite attempt to present it as having a solid scientific basis. Religious claims, in general, though are not pseudoscience since they do not generally try to present as science.

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  6. Robin Herbert

    No need to name names, the point can be made entirely in the abstract. What is the difference between pseudo philosophy, bad philosophy, and non philosophy?

    I can see the reply from garth and Coel already.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. synred

    The need to raise itself above humanity is humanity’s main characteristic

    The totality of our so-called knowledge or beliefs, from the most casual matters of geography and history to the profoundest laws of atomic physics or even of pure mathematics and logic, is a man-made fabric which impinges on experience only along the edges.

    It follows from the supreme perfection of God that he chose the best possible plan in producing the universe, a plan in which there is the greatest variety together with the greatest order.

    Metaphysicians are musicians without musical ability.

    http://tommymackay.tripod.com/P.Generator.htm

    –>endless fun.

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  8. synred

    Dan:

    As you often point out, people need to know something about it to do philosophy. I would never mistake you or Massimo for a buzz word generator, however, much you tend to disagree.

    I think calling such pretense pseudo-philosophy is not unreasonable, but it is what is, whatever we call it, say, BS in the technical sense or NEW (not even wrong). Well there’s always Heidegger to confuse the issue…

    Bad philosophy is more like somebody made a mistake in logic or reasoning. It’s kind of like an incorrect experiment – it happens to the best.

    The boundary is less clear in Science. Pseudo-science often makes specific, but incorrect claims [a]. It’s not that the claims are wrong, but that they are either untestable or insisted on despite failing testing.

    There are even ‘untestable’ things that may be true; these are neither science nor pseudo-science, but something else…?

    -Traruh

    [a] or even correct claims accidentally or for insufficient reasons.

    Liked by 1 person

  9. brodix

    Peter Woit has an interesting review of Cathy O’Neil’s latest book, Weapons of Math Destruction.
    (would add a link, but it seems to put the comment on hold)
    (Also the first comment in the thread offers a good counter-argument)

    “In fact, I saw all kinds of parallels between finance and Big Data. Both industries gobble up the same pool of talent, much of it from elite universities like MIT, Princeton and Stanford. These new hires are ravenous for success and have been focused on external metrics – like SAT scores and college admissions – their entire lives. Whether in finance or tech, the message they’ve received is that they will be rich, they they will run the world…

    In both of these industries, the real world, with all its messiness, sits apart. The inclination is to replace people with data trails turning them into more effective shoppers, voters, or workers to optimize some objective… More and more I worried about the separation between technical models and real people, and about the moral repercussions of that separation. If fact, I saw the same pattern emerging that I’d witnessed in finance: a false sense of security was leading to widespread use of imperfect models, self-serving definitions of success, and growing feedback loops. Those who objected were regarded as nostalgic Luddites.

    I wondered what the analogue to the credit crisis might be in Big Data. Instead of a bust, I saw a growing dystopia, with inequality rising. The algorithms would make sure that those deemed losers would remain that way. A lucky minority would gain ever more control over the data economy, taking in outrageous fortunes and convincing themselves that they deserved it.”

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  10. Thomas Jones

    My first reaction was this is a tempest in a teapot (yikes, a cliche), this, despite my recognition that the subject matter is clearly important to Massimo as both scientist and philosopher, and he wants to pursue the usage of this perjorative term from those vantages. But to my mind his central point is made about two-thirds into his article: “It is far better to engage in a case-by-case discussion and inquire into the validity of this or that label, given currently acceptable epistemic standards.” I would only add “with due consideration of an intended audience.” Frankly, I don’t like labels as shortcuts regardless of the context, or soon we end with cliquish acronyms or emoticons as substitutes for clarity and meaningful discussions.

    When we prepend “pseudo” to “science,” we may be–willfully or unwittingly–engaging in pretense depending on our audience, i.e., adding a dash of gravitas where “bogus science” won’t do, despite its merits. Nevertheless, either usage requires further explanation in the interests of clarity and good faith, regardless of context.

    Whether pseudoscience is an over-used term outside special contexts may simply be a misperception or a by-product of our reading habits. I seldom encounter it otherwise, but that alone doesn’t detract from the seriousness of sound usage in exposition as opposed to lazy language especially when it’s published for general consumption.

    There’s a brief intro to this term in Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Pseudoscience

    Regarding the exchanges about eugenics between DM and Socratic, I think both of you would enjoy DeLillo’s latest novel “Zero K.” There’s a decent review in the New York Times where the reviewer humorously notes:

    “The primary architects of the Convergence, a pair of siblings Jeff calls the Stenmark twins, hold a kind of slapstick seminar on their project; it plays like the Marx Brothers doing a TED talk with the mind-body philosophers Paul and Patricia Churchland. I found myself asking: What would happen if the souls of the cryogenically preserved went to heaven? Would they resurrect as zombies when science restored their bodies? The book inspires a lot of intellectual play as it drifts away from stark Kafka landscape into Borges-­inspired mindspace, even flirting with the trippier themes of Philip K. Dick, and elegy starts to compete not with science fiction, exactly, but with fiction about science.”

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  11. wtc48

    I’m wondering whether Big Data might not be the royal road to pseudoscience. I was thinking about Bill James, Sabermetrics and “Moneyball” as instances of somewhat successful application of statistics to professional sports. Perhaps an essential element of pseudoscience is that it seems to produce results, at least at first. Moneyball worked very well at first as a technique for a poorly funded team to win a lot of games, but as soon as other teams got into the act, the initial success wore off. At what point does technique become science? And is consistency of results the main criterion?

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  12. SocraticGadfly

    Thomas, labels are neither bad nor good, in my opinion. A generalization can serve as a rule of thumb, to trot out an old saying, but if it’s carried too far, becomes a stereotype. A utilitarian would apply a Benthamite calculus of some sort to figure out when that line has been crossed.

    I myself use the term “pseudomedicine” rather than “alternative medicine” for what the Green Party officially supports to a degree, sadly, and a certain chunk of its members support rabidly.

    We all use heuristics. Part of human nature. The “pseudo-,” per Massimo’s qualifications — and per the Feyerabend series, we might note the utterer as well as the context — I don’t have more problems with “pseudo-” as a heuristic than I do many others.

    Liked by 1 person

  13. SocraticGadfly

    Arthur: As “intelligence” is normally understood in the human sense, I don’t think we breed sheep dogs that way. Rather, we breed to emphasize certain groupings of instinctual behaviors that, under human harness, make for a good sheep dog.

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  14. synred

    A border collie is a damned smart animal. It is in any case, ‘herding’ is a complex behavioral trait.. I have little doubt you could breed for whatever IQ test test, but it’s would be wrong and ‘not a good idea.’

    It would require a fascist state to do it.

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  15. synred

    Dan:
    Even Wittgenstein would not require a ‘rigorous fashion’ would he? Wasn’t that part of his point?

    -Traruh (who admittedly never finished PI)

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  16. Thomas Jones

    Quite frankly, Socratic, labels contribute very little to everyday life. Heuristics are tools with agreed upon meaning within certain disciplines. Otherwise, they are are lazily utilized to identify and/or parse clans: A liberal is a democrat; a conservative is a Republican. And, of course, it gets worse. One might as well wear buttons or tattoo themselves to identify their allegiances. Do read DeLillo. He’s perhaps the premier novelist on the late 20th Century US. He’s 80 years old now,

    Liked by 2 people

  17. Daniel Kaufman

    Traruh: Wittgenstein was very rigorous. I’m not talking about giving definitions in terms of necessary and sufficient conditions. I’m talking about giving any rigorous account of the distinction at all.

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  18. synred

    Dan:
    Evil is Nazi or even Marxist
    Bad is mistaken…
    Pseudo is just flaky …though it can be dangerous if taken seriously in matters of health or public policy…
    Good enough?

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  19. astrodreamer

    “Science, just like pseudoscience, as well as any other interestingly concept concept, is inherently fuzzy, Wittgenstein-style. We understand it and can meaningfully talk about it, but chasing after rigorous definitions based on a small set of necessary and jointly sufficient conditions is a fool’s errand.”

    Well, It is not I who have been chasing after definitions of pseudoscience, and if such activity now appears to you as a fool’s errand, your return is rather sheepish — we can’t define it but we’ll continue to condemn it just as if we had. Debunking is is no way intellectually challenging, it’s knocking down childrens games, it’s popular and it’s safe. the difficult, dangerous and important task of a critical philosophy of science would be to clarify the domains that are improper to science, and assess the damage done when they are not protected from scientific invasion.

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  20. Philosopher Eric

    I’ll agree with DM, Coel, and Synred that eugenics seems perfectly viable, and therefore I wouldn’t naturally call it “pseudoscience” (not that I know anything about modern study in this regard). Furthermore when a woman goes into a sperm bank to begin a new family, she will surely assess the stats of the various donors on offer in order to find generally desirable traits. So this is a practical bit of human genetic engineering, which I suppose could become quite normal some day.

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  21. Philosopher Eric

    I’ll also agree with Astrodreamer that interesting concepts such as science and pseudoscience needn’t be “fuzzy.” If they do now exist this way, this should simply be an obstacle for us to overcome rather than a wall that cannot be breached. To me the converse position seems quite defeatists. Of course I say this with my own definitions for terms like these, which don’t seem fuzzy at all.

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