Fair enough. I feel like sociologists *should* already have the background & priming to see & understand wide-scale social impacts of technical decisions. Like, that's literally their coursework. Maybe they aren't primed to think about ethical impacts so much?
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Being an academic sociologist seems to be strongly anticorrelated with understanding social dynamics on a deep level. It usually starts with missing the simple insight that the social domain is a subdomain of the physical universe and not a moral narrative.
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chunksof The academic sociologists I've met & those I've read have, by and large, been reasonable, grounded, & interested in ethical concerns. I might easily be missing big chunks of the field who are idiots. (After all, there were a lot of idiots in my CS program too.)
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I have met a number of amazing people working in sociology. But unlike CS, social sciences do not seem to have a paradigm that weeds out utter crap.
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If sociology produced applicable insights, should governments and corporations not be lead by sociologists, the experts of raising to power and wielding it? There are even more computer scientists leading corporations than sociologists!
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