Education
325 sourcesEducation and the sociology of knowledge were lifelong concerns for Ray Peat, who held a master's degree in English literature before pursuing his PhD in biology. He was deeply critical of the authoritarian tendencies in academic science, where institutional consensus suppresses dissent and innovative thinking. He traced how economic interests (pharmaceutical, agricultural, chemical industries) shape what is taught as scientific fact.
Peat advocated for genuine critical thinking — questioning assumptions, examining evidence independently, and understanding the historical and political context of scientific claims. He drew inspiration from William Blake's critiques of rationalism, the Russian tradition of holistic biology, and American pragmatists like John Dewey.
Key Positions
- Academic science often functions as an authoritarian institution suppressing dissent
- Economic interests shape 'scientific consensus' on nutrition, hormones, and medicine
- Critical thinking requires understanding the political and economic context of claims
- The history of science reveals repeated suppression of valid findings (e.g., 46 chromosomes)
- Interdisciplinary thinking is essential — biology needs insights from physics, philosophy, and literature
- William Blake's critique of narrow rationalism informed Peat's philosophy of science
- Self-education and independent thinking are more reliable than institutional training
Sources
325 items-
Intelligence and metabolism
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Intuitive knowledge and its development
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Iron's Dangers.
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Meat physiology, stress, and degenerative physiology
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Membranes, plasma membranes, and surfaces
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Menopause and its causes.
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Multiple Sclerosis and other hormone related brain syndromes
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Multiple Sclerosis and other hormone-related brain syndromes
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Natural Estrogens
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Nutrition by Nature - Kate Skinner
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Oils in Context.
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Osteoporosis, harmful calcification, and nerve/muscle malfunctions.
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PaleoGo - Rami Adada
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Pathological Science & General Electric: Threatening the paradigm
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Peatarian Email Depository
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Physiology texts and the real world
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Pregnenolone
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Progesterone Summaries
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Progesterone, not estrogen, is the coronary protection factor of women.
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Protective CO2 and aging
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Protective CO2 and aging
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RU486, Cancer, Estrogen, and Progesterone
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Ray Peat's site
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Regeneration and degeneration: Types of inflammation change with aging
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Rosacea, inflammation, and aging: The inefficiency of stress