The killing of knowledge systems. Not just the loss of individual facts, but the systematic destruction of entire ways of knowing—languages, indigenous sciences, local healing traditions, alternative frameworks for understanding the world. Epistemicide happens when colonialism erases native astronomy, when globalization flattens local agricultural knowledge, when academia declares that only certain methods produce "real" knowledge. It's murder by attrition: a thousand small dismissals that together silence ways of understanding that evolved over millennia. The tragedy isn't just the lost information—it's the lost ways of arriving at information.
"When the missionaries came, they didn't just bring a new religion—they brought a new way of knowing that made our elders' knowledge sound like superstition. That wasn't conversion; that was Epistemicide."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 22, 2026
Get the Epistemicide mug.The ongoing, accelerated destruction of diverse knowledge systems in the digital age, driven by algorithms, platform monopolies, and the attention economy. If historical epistemicide was missionaries burning libraries, 21st Century Epistemicide is the recommendation algorithm burying everything outside its optimized categories. It's Wikipedia in English becoming the default "truth" while oral traditions vanish. It's Twitter amplifying hot takes while erasing context. It's the subtle, continuous message that if your knowledge isn't searchable, quantifiable, and algorithm-friendly, it doesn't count. The killing is cleaner now—no smoke, just silence.
"My grandmother's herbal remedies don't have a Wikipedia page, so my nephew Googles his symptoms and trusts the first result. That's 21st Century Epistemicide: a thousand years of knowledge erased because it couldn't be SEO-optimized."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 22, 2026
Get the 21st Century Epistemicide mug.