By Andrew Follett
Tuesday, December 20, 2022
Canada’s government granted a group of academics
almost $164,000 for a research project called “Decolonizing Light: Tracing and
countering colonialism in contemporary physics,” a search of grant records
confirmed.
Disturbingly, the academics involved admit that they have
zero interest in performing science or seeking truth but are instead interested
in spreading woke ideology. “The purpose of our project is not to find new or
better explanations of light; we are not seeking to improve scientific
‘truth,’” scholars involved in the project wrote in one of their few
published works. “Rather, our project initiatives are motivated by the
marginalization of women, Black people, and Indigenous peoples particularly in
physics.”
In 2018, the “Decolonizing Light” project received a grant for $163,567 directly from the Canadian
government via the New Frontiers in Research Fund (NFRF). The NFRF’s
website claims that the fund is dedicated to ensuring “Best Practices in Equity,
Diversity and Inclusion in Research.”
“To narrow down our research, the project will focus on
light in general and on large-scale research facilities (‘synchrotron’ light
sources) in particular, which employ light for physical research,” the
project’s grant application reads. “We regard the synchrotron as prototypical
paradigm for contemporary physics research, physical knowledge, and the professional
culture of physics, the decolonization of which is aspired in the proposed
project. For the proposed exploration, we will follow complementary approaches:
engaging Indigenous ontologies and epistemologies as well as empowering
Indigenous students to engage in contemporary science to attain Indigenous
sovereignty.”
It gets stranger. The academics also plan to decolonize
light itself by “de-centering” Western astronomy and science in favor of
developing courses with indigenous scholars and “Knowledge Keepers” via
“Two-Eyed Seeing.” The researchers claim that “the Two-Eyed Seeing approach
allows for intercultural collaboration and multiple perspectives. . . . It
encourages the realization that beneficial outcomes are much more likely in any
given situation when we are willing to bring two or more perspectives into play.”
This word salad presumably means that the project intends
to promote the pre-colonial-era astronomical understanding of the indigenous
populations of North America, and substitute this for modern knowledge in
university curricula. “To date, no examples of successfully established
decolonized physics courses and curricula exist at Canadian universities,”
according to the “Decolonizing Light” project’s grant application. The
researchers hope to change that by replacing astronomical science with
“indigenous star stories,” so that one might obtain a degree in astronomy
presumably simply by learning indigenous legends about constellations.
The project is headed
by a Dr. Tanja Tajmel, a special adviser to the dean of diversity, equity,
and inclusion at Concordia University in Montréal, whose research interests
include “investigating ‘othering’ in STEM, exploring decolonizing approaches in
STEM, and developing further the meaning and understanding of equity in the
STEM fields.” Of the 18 academic investigators listed on the project’s
website, only one has a doctorate in astronomy. (Tajmel is
trained in “physics didactics.”) Everyone else’s expertise is in unrelated,
often identity-focused fields such as “First
Peoples’ Studies.”
The “Decolonizing Light” project’s interdisciplinary team
of scholars have only published one, six-page article, regarding their intentions, in the
journal Physics in Canada in 2021, despite having been active since 2018, and produced a single program on Indigenous star stories. The
program included a lengthy land acknowledgment and the playing of a traditional
indigenous water drum. The main presenter, Wilfred Buck, was introduced as,
among other things, an astrologer and “the foremost authority on indigenous
astronomy in the world.”
Buck told a university audience a tale about a Cree
constellation called “Grandmother Spider” that overlaps with the constellation
of Cassiopeia (the Greek name by which the International Astronomical Union
refers to the constellation). In this origin story, before humans existed,
Grandmother Spider helped a “star woman” made of pure energy travel through another
constellation, the Hole in the Sky (the Pleiades), to Earth. Learning about
native mythology can be valuable, but problems arise when mythology is taught
as fact. For example, mention of a horse constellation acted as segue for the
speaker to inaccurately claim that indigenous people had and used horses before
European contact. Throughout the talk, the presenter stressed the importance of
receiving guidance from dreams and visions, instead of experiments or data. He
suggested that dreams could help to recover lost pre-colonial indigenous
knowledge, and even “sync with another reality” within the multiverse.
“For our purpose, it is important to understand physics
as a social field rather than as ‘pure knowledge’ independent from social
values and decisions,” the researchers write in their Physics
in Canada article. “Physics is more than the laws that describe
and predict natural phenomena: it is the overarching field of work with its
societal dimension, its history, and the circumstances and purposes of physical
knowledge production. The opportunity to participate in producing such
scientific knowledge as well as the purposes and benefits of this knowledge are
framed by social power relations, by politics, and also by colonialism.”
The U.S. government has funded similarly ideological
(though not as overtly woke or deranged) research. A
major study, directly funded by NASA, on the potential of alien
civilizations’ contacting humanity, wonders whether humanity’s sins — “racism,
genocide, inequity, sabotage . . . the list sprawls” — might eradicate our
species before it ever gets a chance to make contact with extraterrestrials.
American scientific journals have also displayed a keen
interest in “decolonization.” “Decolonization should extend to collaborations,
authorship and co-creation of knowledge,” the once-prestigious journal Nature tweeted in late November. The institution of scientific
journals, it must be noted, is a Western invention originating in Britain, so, if
the editors of Nature wish to remove European influence from
science, they might consider ceasing their own publication as a start.
That same month, Nature published a
feature entitled “Seeding an anti-racist culture at Scotland’s
botanical gardens,” which described this institution’s announcement of an
“action plan to ‘embed’ racial-justice work as a ‘core aspect’ of botany in
order to ‘make the gardens a more inclusive space.’” According to Nature,
this was necessary to honor George Floyd, as “before Floyd’s murder, botanical
gardens had largely escaped the scrutiny” to which apparently everything must
now be subjected.
These forays into purportedly decolonized astronomy and
allegedly anti-racist plant science are representative of a growing trend. From
physics to botany, hitherto serious scientific fields are being infected by
radical identity politics — what Elon Musk has called “the woke mind virus.” The ideological
extremism that was until recently mostly confined to the humanities, explicitly
identity-focused fields (e.g., fat studies, “Latinx” studies, queer studies,
etc.), and certain areas of the social sciences, is gradually extending its
reach into the hard sciences.
The “Decolonizing Light” project has indeed shed light on
something: It has demonstrated that no academic discipline is immune to the
threat of takeover by the radical Left.
No comments:
Post a Comment