ruby sparks
Contributor
Is a 'blind' (or neutral) approach to certain social and political issues (I have named two in the thread title as prominent examples) overall better or worse in terms of advancing progress towards beneficial change, compared to the opposite (not having a blind or neutral approach)?
As I understand it, there are pros and cons to both approaches, so I thought a discussion might be informative.
As ever, I think it would be great if the discussion could include as many facts and as much data as possible. It's not that I'm against statements of personal opinion such as 'I personally think X is better than Y' or 'if we did X instead of Y it would (hypothetically) be better' because those are subjective/abstract/philosophical statements which do not readily resolve the OP question in an empirical, objective or real world sense, and I am a big fan of those when it comes to answers to almost everything (while accepting that accurate answers are not as readily available in the so-called 'soft' sciences).
My instinct, as nearly always, would be to say that the answer to the question is going to be variegated, that 'blind' policies are better in some ways and worse in others and that the question doesn't have a binary set of answers, and that as such, the best approach is going to involve a mix of both blindness and recognition and that the important (and trickiest) part of any answer is going to be what the mix should be in this or that situation or sphere of activity.
As I understand it, there are pros and cons to both approaches, so I thought a discussion might be informative.
As ever, I think it would be great if the discussion could include as many facts and as much data as possible. It's not that I'm against statements of personal opinion such as 'I personally think X is better than Y' or 'if we did X instead of Y it would (hypothetically) be better' because those are subjective/abstract/philosophical statements which do not readily resolve the OP question in an empirical, objective or real world sense, and I am a big fan of those when it comes to answers to almost everything (while accepting that accurate answers are not as readily available in the so-called 'soft' sciences).
My instinct, as nearly always, would be to say that the answer to the question is going to be variegated, that 'blind' policies are better in some ways and worse in others and that the question doesn't have a binary set of answers, and that as such, the best approach is going to involve a mix of both blindness and recognition and that the important (and trickiest) part of any answer is going to be what the mix should be in this or that situation or sphere of activity.
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