Should Science Be Politically Correct?
First of all, of course words can be ideological. No words, no ideology. And that doesn't mean that "words are ideology"—as in every word is ideological—because ideologically loaded words are a subset of words in general; I'm not claiming any more than the obvious on that one. Secondly, if a particular scientist is given free rein to name a scientific term any way s/he wants, it follows (seeing that at least some words are ideologically loaded) that s/he is given free rein to introduce ideological connotations. That doesn't mean s/he will do that but s/he could and there should be a mechanism to keep this unnecessarily ideological baggage out of science. This is what
@NOS4A2 claims to want, and I agree with the desire, but as I said his position is confused. Thirdly, I never made the argument that "supremacy" means "white supremacy" nor did anybody else. The argument made by the small group of scientists in question is that the term "supremacy"
connotes the idea of white supremacy, that therefore it is polluted by that term and a more neutral phrasing is desirable. Seeing as the only consequence of a more neutral phrasing with a synonymous term would be to remove the possibility of the negative connotation, it's a hardly a terribly unreasonable proposal. But it's not one that I would be gunning for either.
Further, controlling word usage in this fashion is not harmless, its a wedge for authoritarian control whether its intended that way or not. (Meaning, even if that control is used to combat racism or something by a good actor, it can and will be used by bad actors). — DingoJones
Again, a very confused position. Combating racism in science shouldn't be allowed because that could be used by bad actors and therefore it's authoritarian to do so? So, a scientist could discover a new particle and call it the "N-word particle" and we would be word-Nazis to oppose that? I suggest you either think things through a bit more or try to phrase your arguments with more nuance (If you just mean, for example, this type of word control is not always harmless but still should be allowed then fine, but you give the impression you're against it in principle).
The sensible solution to this is that the scientific community follow a set of thoroughly thought-through guidelines on the appropriate naming of scientific concepts and enforce those in a unified and fair fashion to keep politically incendiary notions as remote from scientific terms as possible. No trial by Nature article but no absolute free rein either.