Definitions by Abzugal
Scientific Post-structuralism
The application of post-structuralist thought to science: questioning binary oppositions (nature/culture, objective/subjective, fact/value), deconstructing scientific categories, exposing the instability of scientific concepts, and revealing how scientific knowledge is produced through discursive practices rather than simply discovered. Post-structuralism doesn't deny that science works—it denies that science works the way it says it works. It's science forced to confront its own textuality, its own rhetoric, its own constructedness.
"You keep appealing to 'nature' as if it's a stable foundation. Scientific Post-structuralism says: 'nature' is a concept with a history, produced through discourse, serving particular interests. It's not a ground—it's an effect. Your science is text, not truth. Deal with it."
Scientific Post-structuralism by Abzugal February 23, 2026
Epistemological Semiotics
The theory that all knowledge is mediated by signs—that we never access reality directly but always through representations: language, images, symbols, concepts. There is no unmediated knowing, no raw contact with the real. Epistemological Semiotics studies how sign systems shape what can be known, how representation enables and constrains understanding. It's the recognition that we are always, already in the realm of meaning, and that meaning-making is the condition of knowledge, not its obstacle.
"You think you're experiencing reality directly? Epistemological Semiotics says: you're experiencing reality filtered through language, culture, personal history—all sign systems. There's no escape into the raw real. The signs are the only access you have. Learn to read them or stay confused."
Epistemological Semiotics by Abzugal February 23, 2026
Scientific Semiotics
The study of how meaning is made in science through signs, symbols, and representations. Scientific Semiotics analyzes how data become signs, how graphs signify, how models mean, how language shapes what can be said. It reveals that science is not just about discovering facts but about creating sign systems that make facts visible and communicable. A number is a sign. A diagram is a sign. A theory is a sign system. Understanding science requires understanding how its signs work.
"Your p-value is 0.03—what does that mean? Scientific Semiotics says: it's a sign, not a fact. It signifies something about your data relative to your assumptions. But signs need interpretation. Don't mistake the signifier for the signified, or you'll think statistical significance is actual significance."
Scientific Semiotics by Abzugal February 23, 2026
Epistemological Postcritique
An approach to knowing that moves beyond the hermeneutics of suspicion—beyond the reflexive questioning of every knowledge claim's hidden interests, power relations, and ideological functions. Postcritique doesn't abandon critique but recognizes that perpetual suspicion is exhausting and ultimately barren. It asks what we can affirm, what we can trust, what we can build. It's epistemology that has done its therapy, processed its trauma, and is ready to risk believing again—knowing the risks, choosing to trust anyway.
"You've gotten so good at deconstructing every claim that you can't believe anything anymore. Epistemological Postcritique says: critique is a tool, not a permanent address. At some point, you have to risk trusting, knowing you might be wrong. Suspicion as a lifestyle is just another kind of certainty."
Epistemological Postcritique by Abzugal February 23, 2026
Scientific Postcritique
A movement in science studies that moves beyond the hermeneutics of suspicion—beyond always asking what power, ideology, or hidden interest lies behind scientific claims. Postcritique doesn't reject critique but supplements it with attention, repair, and reconstruction. It asks not just "what's wrong with this science?" but "what's valuable? What can we build? What should we preserve?" It's science after the deconstruction, after the critique, after the suspicion—still critical, but also constructive, also caring.
"We've spent decades deconstructing this field's biases. Scientific Postcritique says: okay, now what? What's still useful? What do we build next? Critique without reconstruction is just nihilism with better vocabulary."
Scientific Postcritique by Abzugal February 23, 2026
Epistemological Literalism
The naive belief that language can directly capture reality—that words mean what they mean, that concepts correspond to things, that truth is a matter of matching statements to world. Epistemological Literalism ignores the mediated, constructed, interpretive nature of all knowing. It's the epistemology of the confident, the unreflective, the certain. It feels like common sense but is actually a sophisticated philosophical position that most of philosophy has spent centuries dismantling.
"Just tell me the truth, directly, no interpretation." Epistemological Literalism: as if truth came pre-packaged in language, as if words weren't interpretations, as if you could escape meaning-making. There is no direct—only mediated. Grow up."
Epistemological Literalism by Abzugal February 23, 2026
Scientific Literalism
The mistaken belief that scientific models, theories, and concepts are literal descriptions of reality rather than useful approximations. The Literalist thinks an electron is "really" a particle, a gene is "really" a discrete unit, a map is "really" the territory. Scientific Literalism forgets that science builds models, not mirrors—useful fictions that help us predict and intervene, not photographs of the noumenal world. It's the error of confusing the menu for the meal, the map for the landscape, the model for reality.
"You're arguing about whether light is 'really' a particle or a wave. Scientific Literalism: it's neither—those are models we use because they work. The map is not the territory. Your literalism is preventing you from understanding what science actually does."
Scientific Literalism by Abzugal February 23, 2026