How Race Makes a Difference

A tension appears in contemporary social-scientific studies of the causal effects of race. Race is understood by most scholars today to be a deeply social phenomenon??"a category that not only explains distinctive patterns of social inequality but is defined by these myriad social differences. But this fact about race, on the one hand, sits uneasily with a core tenet of the concept of cause, on the other. On the leading philosophical and scientific-methodological accounts of causation, a cause is something that makes a difference in conditions that are, broadly speaking, “otherwise equal.” But if race marks social difference, then what is it for two persons or groups that are differently racialized to be “otherwise equal” in the sense required by good causal inquiry into the effects of race? Those different in racial status are defined by a host of social differences. And yet the background conditions that must be installed for causal inquiry to get off the ground require leveling those very inequalities. The aim of this talk is to draw out this internal tension and to see how it might be resolved - without giving up on the scientific project of causal inquiry about race.
Speaker: Lily Hu, Yale University
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Monday, 03/03/25
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Stanford Symbolic Systems Forum
460-126
Stanford, CA 94305
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