Academics have clashed over a journal paper that explores the idea that intelligence might be linked to race.
Mark Alfano, who holds academic posts at Sydney¡¯s Macquarie University and Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands, launched a petition last month that calls for the leadership of the journal Philosophical Psychology to resign, apologise or retract an article written by Nathan Cofnas, a doctoral student at the University of Oxford.
The paper, in December, considers how society might need to respond differently if, ¡°in a very short time¡±, science concludes that some races are more intelligent than others.
The default position of social sciences and philosophy, which ¡°ignores or rejects¡± evidence of racial differences, could lead to ¡°unintended consequences¡± that might harm minority groups, Mr Cofnas contends.
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An attached to the paper acknowledges that the article ¡°certainly adopts provocative positions on a host of issues related to race, genetics, and IQ¡±, but says its inclusion was based on ¡°philosophical and scientific merit, rather than ideological conformity¡±.
Professor Alfano got into a Twitter spat with Mr Cofnas, in which he said he wanted to ruin his ¡°¡± after the PhD student called him a ¡°¡±. ¡°You¡¯re about to learn why people generally avoid fucking with me,¡± added Professor Alfano.
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Speaking to Times Higher Education, Professor Alfano said his actions were justified in light of Mr Cofnas¡¯ ¡°repugnant¡± policy suggestions.
The conclusion that the government should ¡°devote money to programmes that are tailored to the strengths of different groups¡is obviously just code for racially segregated education¡±, Professor Alfano said, claiming that the ¡°reasoning backing Cofnas¡¯ suggestions [was] argumentatively very weak¡± and adding that the article contained ¡°obvious and egregious errors¡±.
¡°This is not simply a matter of dislike or disagreement,¡± he continued, saying that ¡°that framing is a?bit like saying that epidemiologists dislike or disagree with the conclusions drawn by anti-vaxxers¡±. It was ¡°quite a stretch to say that I¡¯m part of some sort of ill-defined ¡®cancel culture¡¯¡±, Professor Alfano said.
However, Mr Cofnas told THE that his paper did not mention segregation, which was a ¡°totally unrelated idea¡± to his argument.
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¡°I am aware that this is an emotional issue and some people are not happy with addressing it,¡± he said.
But the failure to tackle it meant that ¡°when evidence does come¡±, society would not be prepared to rebut the positions developed by white supremacist theorists, Mr Cofnas said.
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