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disruptive 

causing or tending to cause disruption.
the hours of work are disruptive to home life
disruptive by Milo Padilla January 23, 2021

Disruptive Engineering

Engineering that doesn't just make a better product; it makes the old product (and often the entire industry behind it) completely obsolete by introducing a simpler, cheaper, and more accessible alternative. It’s not about incremental upgrades (a sharper razor blade); it’s about changing the fundamental game (inventing the electric shaver). Disruptive engineers ask, "What if we bypass the entire complicated, expensive system?" They prioritize accessibility and new-market creation over serving existing high-end customers.
Example: Disruptive Engineering is what Netflix did to Blockbuster. Instead of engineering better DVD coatings or more efficient physical store layouts, they engineered a mail-order and later streaming system that made the physical rental store—and its late fees, inventory problems, and real estate costs—utterly irrelevant.

Disruptive Sciences

Scientific fields or paradigms that fundamentally overthrow established theories and methodologies, forcing a complete re-understanding of a domain. It’s not just new data; it’s a new lens that makes the old textbook chapters wrong. These sciences often start on the fringes, mocked or ignored by the mainstream, until their explanatory power becomes undeniable, causing a "paradigm shift" that reshapes all future research.
Example: The shift from Newtonian physics to Einstein's theory of relativity was Disruptive Science. It didn't just add to Newton's ideas; it showed they were incomplete and incorrect at certain scales, completely restructuring our concepts of space, time, and gravity. Plate tectonics similarly disrupted earth sciences by replacing static continent models with a dynamic planetary engine. Disruptive Sciences