The Knox Lecture is an annual public lecture in the area of philosophy, at the University of St Andrews. The 2024 speaker was Professor Elizabeth Anderson (Michigan), who spoke on the topic of ‘Categorical inequality and the economy of Esteem'.
Social theorists have had considerable empirical success in modeling social hierarchy in terms of ‘categorical inequality'. In this framework, entire social groups enjoy superior power, social esteem, and wealth over other groups: aristocrats over commoners, men over women, blacks over whites in the US, Brahmins over Dalits in India, etc.Theorists of ‘intersectionality' challenge such simple models by noting that everyone has multiple social identities that have non-additive interactions. This fact upsets attempts to reduce all inequalities to a linear system of social stratification.
Professor Anderson argues that, once we incorporate Rousseau's argument that the desire for superior esteem drives the creation of social hierarchy, even intersectional theories fail to capture the myriad ways social inequality resolves into much finer-grained social inequalities. She discusses some of the normative implications of these facts. Among these are that ‘privilege' frames (e.g., ‘white privilege') are not just inaccurate and politically self-defeating, but grant far too much credence to the inegalitarian ideologies deployed to rationalize the very hierarchies that privilege frames aim to discredit.
Professor Anderson also discusses Rousseau's idea: to persuade people that even the purported winners of hierarchical systems ultimately become losers, because such systems have no internal brakes against ever-rising inequality.
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