Definitions by Dumuabzu
Science Slurs
Pejorative terms used within and against scientific discourse to shut down inquiry, attack researchers' motives, or caricature positions without engagement. They are rhetorical weapons that replace argument with dismissal. On one side, terms like "pseudoscientist," "crank," or "denier" can be applied too broadly to shut down heterodox but legitimate questioning. On the other, terms like "lab-coat priest," "scientism," or "so-called expert" are used to delegitimize scientific consensus itself by framing it as a dogmatic religion.
Example: In a debate on GMOs, a scientist is called a "Monsanto shill," instantly dismissing their data as corrupt. Conversely, a philosopher questioning the limits of reductionism is labeled a "woo-peddler" or "anti-science." Terms like "climate alarmist" or "evolutionist" are crafted to frame scientific consensus as ideological. These slurs pollute the epistemic commons, turning discussions into tribal warfare where identity, not evidence, determines belief. Science Slurs.
Science Slurs by Dumuabzu January 25, 2026
Micropragmatics and Macropragmatics
Micropragmatics is the fine-grained, on-the-ground study of how meaning is made in specific, real-time situations. It focuses on the immediate context—the who, where, when, and how of a single interaction. This is the realm of inside jokes, loaded silences, subtle eye rolls, and the unspoken rules that everyone in a particular room seems to just get. It answers questions like: Why did that specific word choice change the whole mood? How did a shift in someone’s tone turn a question into an accusation? Micropragmatics is the rulebook for a single, unfolding social game.
Macropragmatics is the big-picture study of how meaning is governed by larger systems—culture, ideology, institutions, and historical norms. It zooms out to ask how the broad rules of the social world enable or constrain what can be meaningfully said or done. It examines the overarching scripts, power structures, and cultural narratives that frame our interactions long before we even open our mouths.
Macropragmatics is the big-picture study of how meaning is governed by larger systems—culture, ideology, institutions, and historical norms. It zooms out to ask how the broad rules of the social world enable or constrain what can be meaningfully said or done. It examines the overarching scripts, power structures, and cultural narratives that frame our interactions long before we even open our mouths.
Example: During a tense work meeting, your manager says, "That's certainly a creative approach, Sam." Micropragmatics analyzes the weight of the pause before "creative," the slight eyebrow raise from a colleague, and Sam's deflated posture. It reveals that in this specific moment, "creative" was pragmatically decoded by everyone present as "foolish and unworkable." The dictionary definition doesn't matter; the local, contextual meaning does.
Example: The same manager in the same company never interrupts the CEO but frequently cuts off junior staff. Macropragmatics doesn't analyze each interruption individually. Instead, it examines the company's hierarchical culture, the implicit norms about who "owns" conversational floor, and the broader societal power dynamics that make this pattern predictable and accepted. It explains why the interruptions happen at all, not just how they play out in a given meeting.
In short: You live in the Micropragmatic moment—navigating each conversation’s hidden currents. But you swim in a Macropragmatic ocean—its tides of culture, power, and history determining where you can even go. Micropragmatics is the tactical play-by-play. Macropragmatics is the strategic rulebook for the entire league. You need both to understand how anything ever gets communicated—or misunderstood. Micropragmatics and Macropragmatics.
Example: The same manager in the same company never interrupts the CEO but frequently cuts off junior staff. Macropragmatics doesn't analyze each interruption individually. Instead, it examines the company's hierarchical culture, the implicit norms about who "owns" conversational floor, and the broader societal power dynamics that make this pattern predictable and accepted. It explains why the interruptions happen at all, not just how they play out in a given meeting.
In short: You live in the Micropragmatic moment—navigating each conversation’s hidden currents. But you swim in a Macropragmatic ocean—its tides of culture, power, and history determining where you can even go. Micropragmatics is the tactical play-by-play. Macropragmatics is the strategic rulebook for the entire league. You need both to understand how anything ever gets communicated—or misunderstood. Micropragmatics and Macropragmatics.
Micropragmatics and Macropragmatics by Dumuabzu January 25, 2026
Macropragmatics
The study of meaning-in-action across vast, systemic, and cultural contexts. It zooms out to see patterns, norms, and conventions that govern entire societies, institutions, or historical periods. It asks: How do broad cultural narratives, ideological frameworks, and historical forces shape the kinds of communication and behavior that are possible, legitimate, or effective? It analyzes the pragmatic "rules of the game" for a whole civilization or epoch.
Example: Analyzing political discourse in a democracy. Macropragmatics doesn't look at one senator's speech, but at the overarching norms: the expectation of "civil debate," the pragmatic function of filibusters as delay tactics, how the media frame issues, and the deep cultural narratives (like "the American Dream") that speakers must pragmatically engage with to be persuasive. It explains why a communication style that works in a boardroom (direct, data-driven) would fail pragmatically in a religious ceremony, because the macro-context dictates entirely different rules for what makes an act meaningful.
Macropragmatics by Dumuabzu January 25, 2026
Micropragmatics
The study of meaning-in-action within specific, localized, and immediate contexts. It zooms in on the particular: a single conversation, a specific ritual, a unique case study, or the dynamics of a small group. It asks: How do the individuals right here, right now use language, gesture, and shared assumptions to co-create meaning, achieve goals, or navigate their immediate social reality? It's the fine-grained analysis of the unspoken rules, power plays, and contextual cues that govern a singular interaction.
Example: Analyzing a family dinner argument. Micropragmatics focuses on the specific sarcastic tone the teenager used, the meaningful silence from the father after a particular comment, the shared family history that makes an inside joke land, and how the physical setting (the dinner table) dictates turn-taking. It explains why "Fine, whatever" said with a sigh means defeated acceptance in this moment, even though the dictionary definition is neutral. It's the rulebook for a single, happening game.
Micropragmatics by Dumuabzu January 25, 2026
Noetherian Technologies
A broad class of devices and applications whose fundamental operating principle is the direct application of Noether's Theorem. These technologies don't just obey physics; they actively employ the deep link between symmetry and conservation to perform work, process information, or enable phenomena. They turn a fundamental mathematical theorem of physics into a practical toolkit.
Example: A Conservation-Enforced Battery (CEB). Instead of storing electrons in chemicals, a CEB stores energy by establishing a high-degree of rotational symmetry in a superconducting loop (like a huge angular momentum). To charge it, you apply torque to "wind up" this symmetry. The stored energy is the maintained symmetry. To discharge, you allow a controlled symmetry-breaking process (a tiny, managed drag), and the enforced conservation of angular momentum drives a current as the system tries to maintain the symmetry. It never "runs out" of charge in the traditional sense; it just reaches a point where the symmetry can no longer be usefully broken. Noetherian Technologies.
Noetherian Technologies by Dumuabzu January 24, 2026
Noetherian Engineering
The discipline of designing machines and systems where the core functionality arises from the creation, manipulation, or breaking of continuous symmetries to harness the corresponding conserved quantities as power, control, or structural forces. It's engineering where the blueprints are group theory equations, and the safety checks are conservation laws. Failure occurs not when a bolt shears, but when a symmetry is accidentally restored, shutting down the desired effect.
Example: Building a Gravity-Independent Generator on the Moon. You create a donut-shaped chamber where you establish a perfect translational symmetry in the electromagnetic field along its ring. You then carefully break that symmetry by introducing a pulsed, moving distortion. Noether's Theorem demands this breaking generates a conserved current (energy-momentum). The system harvests this as electrical power. The "fuel" is the act of strategically breaking symmetry, and the power output is directly dictated by the rate and method of the breaking. It's a generator powered by controlled imperfection. Noetherian Engineering.
Noetherian Engineering by Dumuabzu January 24, 2026
Noetherian Travel
A theoretical propulsion concept that abuses the symmetry-conservation link for movement without apparent reaction. It seeks to engineer a scenario where the symmetry of your vehicle's local physical laws is carefully manipulated, and the resulting conserved quantity (usually momentum) is not expelled locally but is instead "handed off" to a distant field or another part of spacetime geometry. The goal is motion that looks like it violates Newton's third law (for every action, an equal reaction) by satisfying it non-locally via deep physics.
Example: The "Phase Sail." The ship's drive doesn't expel mass. Instead, it cyclically changes the internal gauge symmetry of its quantum vacuum core. Noether's Theorem says this changing symmetry must be accompanied by a conserved current (momentum). By coupling this process to the ship's hull and, crucially, to the background Higgs field of the universe, the momentum conservation is satisfied by imparting an infinitesimally small, opposite change in the field's configuration across the cosmos. The ship moves because the entire universe imperceptibly "pushes back" in a diffuse, non-local way. You're not pushing against anything nearby; you're leveraging the universe as your reaction mass. Noetherian Travel.
Noetherian Travel by Dumuabzu January 24, 2026