Definitions by Dumu The Void
Socialist Democracy
A broad term for democratic models that aim to combine political democracy with social ownership of the economy. It ranges from reformist visions (like democratic socialism, which seeks to electorally transition to socialism) to more radical participatory models. The core idea is extending democracy from the narrowly political sphere into the economic realm (workplaces, investment). It’s defined by its opposition to both Stalinist authoritarianism and unregulated capitalism.
Example: Kerala, India, with its long history of elected communist governments, strong public sector, land reforms, and high social indicators within a federal democratic system, is often cited as a real-world experiment in Socialist Democracy, emphasizing social welfare and participatory planning alongside multi-party elections.
Socialist Democracy by Dumu The Void February 5, 2026
People's Democracy
A term historically used by 20th-century communist states, particularly in Eastern Europe and Asia, to describe their political system. It signified a transitional stage between a bourgeois revolution and full socialism, often involving a multi-party "popular front" dominated by the communist party. In practice, "People's Democracy" was a euphemism for a single-party dictatorship where non-communist parties were either puppets or suppressed, and "the people" was a monolithic construct defined by the ruling party.
Example: The German Democratic Republic (East Germany) was a People's Democracy. Other parties existed in the National Front, but they were subservient to the Socialist Unity Party (SED). Elections were uncontested, and the state claimed this system represented the democratic will of "the people" more authentically than the "bourgeois" pluralism of West Germany.
People's Democracy by Dumu The Void February 5, 2026
Council Democracy
A model where sovereign political power rests with a network of directly elected, recallable, and grassroots councils (like workers' councils in factories or community councils in neighborhoods), which federate upward to larger coordinating bodies. It rejects both liberal parliamentarism and vanguard party dictatorship, aiming for a bottom-up, delegate-based system. It’s the political structure championed by libertarian socialists and council communists, who saw it in the brief flowering of the Paris Commune or the early Soviet councils before Bolshevik centralization.
*Example: The short-lived Bavarian Soviet Republic (1919) attempted to implement Council Democracy. Factories and city districts elected councils that sent recallable delegates to a central congress, aiming to administer society without a separate, professional bureaucracy or party hierarchy. It was crushed by Freikorps and central government forces.*
Council Democracy by Dumu The Void February 5, 2026
Democracy of the Proletariat
A Marxist-Leninist concept where state power is wielded directly by the working class (the proletariat), typically through a revolutionary vanguard party, to suppress the former ruling class (the bourgeoisie) and transition society toward communism. This isn't "democracy" in the liberal, multi-party sense; it's a class dictatorship framed as democracy for the vast majority. It often manifests as a one-party state where the party claims to be the sole legitimate representative of the workers' will. Critics see it as the ideological fig leaf for totalitarianism, while proponents argue it's the only true democracy because it excludes the exploitative class from power.
Example: The early Soviet Union under Lenin was the classic attempt at a Democracy of the Proletariat. Workers' councils (soviets) existed, but ultimate authority rested with the Bolshevik Party, which claimed to act in the workers' name while systematically dismantling rival parties, independent unions, and dissent, arguing this was necessary to prevent a bourgeois counter-revolution.
Democracy of the Proletariat by Dumu The Void February 5, 2026
Frequency Sciences
The interdisciplinary collection of fields that use frequency as a primary lens for investigation. This includes: Cymatics (the study of visible sound), Radionics (the controversial claim that disease can be diagnosed and treated via frequency patterns), Archaeoacoustics (studying the acoustic properties of ancient sites), and Astroseismology (probing stellar interiors by studying starquake oscillations). It's the pursuit of knowledge through the logic of waves and rhythms, often at the fringes of mainstream science.
Frequency Sciences Example: Researchers studying the Great Pyramid of Giza to see if its inner chambers are tuned to specific resonant frequencies that might have had ritual or energetic purposes are engaging in a Frequency Science (archaeoacoustics). They treat the ancient structure not just as a tomb, but as a potential acoustic device or resonator.
Frequency Sciences by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026
Frequency Engineering
The design and implementation of systems that generate, control, modulate, and shield against specific frequency bands to achieve desired physical, biological, or informational effects. This goes beyond radio engineering to include: designing materials with metamaterial "frequency cloaks," building habitats that use resonant frequencies to simulate gravity on spacecraft, or creating agricultural fields optimized with growth-enhancing sound frequencies. It's engineering with a spectrum analyzer in one hand and a reality-altering blueprint in the other.
Example: A Dyson Sphere designed not just to capture light, but to modulate the sun's output frequencies—filtering harmful radiation, amplifying useful energy bands, and perhaps even using the star's oscillations for galaxy-wide communication—is a megascale project of Frequency Engineering. It treats a star not as a simple furnace, but as a complex, tuneable frequency engine.
Frequency Engineering by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026
Frequency Technologies
Practical devices and systems that manipulate specific electromagnetic, acoustic, or scalar wave frequencies to achieve effects beyond conventional engineering. This includes directed energy weapons, hyper-precise medical resonance imaging beyond fMRI, matter transmutation via harmonic induction, and communication systems that use quantum entanglement frequencies. It’s the applied wing of Frequency Physics, where you don't just study the universe's vibrations—you hack them.
Frequency Technologies Example: The sonic screwdriver from Doctor Who is the iconic Frequency Technology. It analyzes and emits precisely tuned sonic (and often other wave) frequencies to manipulate locks, electronics, and materials at a distance. A real-world analog is Lithotripsy, which uses focused sound waves (shock frequencies) to non-invasively shatter kidney stones.
Frequency Technologies by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026