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Harding: Summary of Key Points 1

Summarizing some key points from Harding and feminist standpoint epistemology:

Rejection of conventional epistemology and its form of objectivity (weak


objectivity)
There is no theoretical unmediated experience
We ought to abandon the search for perfect, mirror-like representations of the
world and the view of science and epistemology as the search for disinterested,
value-free standards
There are no trans-historical grounds for knowledge.
The rejection of ahistorical foundationalism and experiential foundationalism
(269).
We should reject the hard distinction between sociology and epistemology:
standpoint theories have characteristics of both conventional sociologies and
conventional epistemologies.
Knowledge and science in societies stratified by race and gender are largely
produced by homogenous groups which remain unaware of the social and cultural
background assumptions motivating their concerns
Intuitive experience is frequently not a reliable guide to the regularities of nature
and social life and their underlying causal tendencies (163).
Knowledge and science is not value-free: scientific beliefs, practices, institutions,
histories and problematics are constituted in and through contemporary political
and social projects (145)
Human knowledge seeking cannot defy its historical and sociological conditions;
knowledge and science cannot be freed from politics and morals.
Weak objectivity does not direct us to examine the social, historical, and cultural
evidence in support of our best or true beliefs: it is too narrow (143)
Knowers are not value-free and our search for knowledge should not be premised
upon the search for ahistorical foundations
Cultural agendas and assumptions remain part of the evidence for scientific
claims
We must identify the cultural values and interests of the researchers (162). The
researcher should gaze back at his own socially situated research project in all its
cultural particularity and its relationships to other projects of his culture (163).
The causal symmetry of good and bad, true and false beliefs: we must provide
symmetrical accounts of both good and bad belief that incorporate both micro
processes in the laboratory and macro tendencies in the social order
Epistemology and philosophy of science must include as part of its analysis
critical examination of historical values and interests that may be shared within
the scientific community (147); strong objectivity extends the notion of scientific
research to include systematic examination of the powerful background beliefs of
the scientific community (149).
Thinking as outsiders within: standpoint theory and strong objectivity requires
that we value the perspective of the Other and investigate the social conditions
that create it. Standpoint theory requires that we incorporate race, class, gender,
etc. There is no Woman and are no ahistorical humans. {Note that Part III
Harding: Summary of Key Points 2

explicitly focuses on such Others and that Chapter 11 examines how we might
reinvent ourselves as other.}

Harding must deal with the critique of standpoint epistemology according to which it
maintains a commitment to objectivity and foundationalism. She recognizes that
standpoint epistemology must maintain standards but she sees these standards as distinct
from the kind required by conventional epistemology.
The need to maintain standards: there have to be standards for distinguishing
between how I want the world to be and how, in empirical fact, it is. Otherwise,
might makes right in knowledge seeking just as it tends to do in morals and
politics (160). {Is the crux of the problem for Harding? What does she mean by
empirical fact?}
Standpoint theorists do argue that womens lives provide scientifically preferable
starting points for generating and testing scientific hypotheses compared with the
lives of men in the dominant groups.
Distinguishing between womens experience and womens standpoint: what
women say and what women experience do provide important clues for research
designs and results, but it is the objective perspective from womens lives that
gives legitimacy to feminist knowledge (167).
One can rationally distinguish social conditions giving rise to false beliefs from
those giving rise to less false ones (168).
Ambivalence regarding truth: standpoint theory claims that we can provide good
reasons for dividing beliefs into the false and the probably less false (169); we
can sort our beliefs into the more versus the less partial and distorted, or into the
more versus the less false, without having to commit ourselves to the belief that
the results of feminist research are true (185).

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