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Hard-Narrow Physicalism

A dogmatic version of physicalism that asserts that only physical entities exist and that all phenomena—including consciousness, meaning, and society—must be reducible to physics. It rejects emergent, functional, or pluralist accounts, treating any non‑physical explanation as crypto‑mysticism. This hard‑narrow stance is often asserted rather than argued, and it dismisses the hard problem of consciousness as a “pseudo‑problem.”
Hard-Narrow Physicalism Example: “He insisted that love is ‘just neurotransmitters’ and that any talk of meaning is illusion. Hard‑narrow physicalism: reducing the rich to the reduced.”

Hard-Narrow Reductionism

A stringent form of reductionism that holds that complex phenomena must be explained entirely by their most basic physical components, and that higher‑level explanations are at best provisional. It rejects holism, emergence, and systems thinking as unscientific hand‑waving. This reductionism is hard‑narrow because it denies any legitimate autonomy to psychological, social, or biological levels of analysis.

Example: “He claimed that sociology could be reduced to psychology, psychology to biology, biology to chemistry, chemistry to physics—and that anything else was ‘folk theory.’ Hard‑narrow reductionism: the ladder that forgets it leans on nothing.”
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Hard-Narrow Physicalism

A radical, dogmatic philosophical stance, common in online science communication circles, asserting that everything real is ultimately reducible to the entities, properties, and laws of fundamental physics. Unlike moderate physicalism, this variant is militant and contemptuous: it treats explanations from biology, psychology, sociology, or the humanities as “illusion,” “epiphenomenon,” “empty discourse,” or “pseudo‑matter.” Adherents believe physics already contains (or will soon contain) all truth; other disciplines are mere “engineering” or “second‑class science.” They often ridicule consciousness, free will, meaning, and intentionality as “ghosts in the machine” or “evolutionary cognitive errors.” In practice, a hard‑narrow physicalist denies ontological reality to anything not measurable by a particle detector or describable by a differential equation—including moral values, subjectivity, history, and even mathematics (reduced to computational physics). The position is self‑contradictory: no physical experiment can prove hard‑narrow physicalism; it is itself a metaphysical belief. Its proponents habitually block critics.
Hard-Narrow Physicalism Example: “A hard‑narrow physicalist argued that ‘pain is just a firing pattern of C‑fibre neurons, nothing more.’ When asked about the subjective experience of pain, he replied: ‘That’s an illusion of language. You’re falling into Cartesian error. Only physics matters.’ Then he blocked everyone.”