Unfortunately, the word “scietism” does describe a real set of related failure modes that people trying to be “scientific” frequently fall into, as I discussed in more detail in this thread.
I think “scientism,” “unscientific,” and “pseudoscientific” all have different and necessary meanings: respectively, “attempting to use scientific epistemology but misunderstanding it”, “using bad epistemology,” and “using bad epistemology but making a deliberate effort to look like one is being scientific”. The word closest to meaning what you want “scientism” to mean is probably “Bayesianism”.
Unfortunately, the word “scietism” does describe a real set of related failure modes that people trying to be “scientific” frequently fall into, as I discussed in more detail in this thread.
Unscientific does that job already, while the ‘-ism’ suffix denotes, in this case, belief in science. Why let them have a perfectly good word?
I think “scientism,” “unscientific,” and “pseudoscientific” all have different and necessary meanings: respectively, “attempting to use scientific epistemology but misunderstanding it”, “using bad epistemology,” and “using bad epistemology but making a deliberate effort to look like one is being scientific”. The word closest to meaning what you want “scientism” to mean is probably “Bayesianism”.
No. It also cover people who don’t even try to be scientific.
Agree with that. There is a finer-grained distinction worth drawing—with some other word!