Responding to Sanist Microaggressions with Acts of Epistemic Resistance

IF 1 1区 哲学 0 PHILOSOPHY
Abigail Gosselin
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract People who have mental health diagnoses are often subject to sanist microaggressions in which pejorative terms to describe mental illness are used to represent that which is discreditable. Such microaggressions reflect and perpetrate stigma against severe mental illness, often held unconsciously as implicit bias. In this article, I examine the sanist attitudes that underlie sanist microaggressions, analyzing some of the cognitive biases that support mental illness stigma. Then I consider what responsibility we have with respect to microaggressions. I argue that all people share in a collective responsibility to engage in acts of epistemic resistance that challenge sanist attitudes so that it is easier for bystanders who witness microaggressions, and targets of microaggressions in particular, to identify microaggressions and to point out biased behavior. The act of pointing out bias is best understood as an act of epistemic resistance that is more effective and meaningful in the context of other acts of epistemic resistance. Ultimately, whether to point out bias is an individual decision that one must make after weighing the risks involved; engaging in a range of acts of epistemic resistance, on the other hand, is a moral responsibility everyone shares.
用认知抵抗行为回应Sanist微侵犯
被诊断患有精神疾病的人往往会受到歧视的微侵犯,在这种微侵犯中,人们用贬义的术语来描述精神疾病,以代表那些不光彩的行为。这种微侵犯反映并造成了对严重精神疾病的污名化,通常被无意识地视为隐性偏见。在这篇文章中,我研究了构成sanist微攻击的sanist态度,分析了一些支持精神疾病污名的认知偏见。然后我考虑我们对微侵犯的责任。我认为,所有人都有共同的责任,参与到挑战sanist态度的认知抵抗行动中来,这样,目睹微侵犯行为的旁观者,尤其是微侵犯行为的目标,就更容易识别微侵犯行为,并指出有偏见的行为。指出偏见的行为最好被理解为一种认知抵抗行为,在其他认知抵抗行为的背景下,这种行为更有效、更有意义。最终,是否指出偏见是一个人在权衡所涉及的风险后必须做出的个人决定;另一方面,参与一系列认知抵抗行动是每个人共同的道德责任。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
54
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