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The argument that many systems we call "complex" (global finance, climate models, bureaucratic states) are not inherently complex like a rainforest. Their complexity is designed and accrued through layers of rules, exceptions, intermediaries, and jargon. This constructed complexity often serves as a barrier to entry, a shield for those inside the system, and a source of power for the "experts" who can navigate it. It's complicated by design.
Example: "Filing taxes isn't complex like quantum physics; it's complex like a board game where someone keeps adding new rules to benefit themselves. The Theory of Constructed Complexities shows the tax code's difficulty isn't natural; it's the result of decades of lobbying for loopholes and exemptions. The complexity constructs a moat around wealth, requiring expensive accountants (the wizards of the moat) to cross."
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
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The foundational principle that for any field of inquiry to qualify as scientific, it must study either dynamic systems (systems that change over time), complex systems (systems with interacting components that produce emergent behavior), or both. Static, simple systems may be mathematically describable, but they're not truly scientific—they're just puzzles. The law of dynamics-complexity explains why physics is science (dynamic, often complex), why biology is science (definitely both), and why some fields struggle for scientific status—they're studying phenomena that are either too static, too simple, or both. This law also explains why your love life feels like an unscientific mess: it's dynamic, complex, and completely resistant to prediction, which actually makes it more scientific than a simple, predictable system. Small comfort.
Law of Dynamics-Complexity of Sciences Example: "He tried to argue that astrology was scientific because it made predictions. She invoked the law of dynamics-complexity: 'Science studies dynamic, complex systems. Astrology treats human lives as simple, static outputs of planetary positions. That's not science; that's just wrong.' He said the planets were dynamic. She said not dynamic enough. The argument was dynamic and complex, which at least made it scientific."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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The principle that for a truth claim to adequately capture reality, it must account for both the dynamic nature (constant change) and complex nature (emergent interactions) of the phenomena it describes. Static, simple truths may be comfortable, but they're false for any reality that is dynamic and complex—which is most of reality. This law explains why simple answers to complex questions are always wrong, why yesterday's truths may not apply today, and why wisdom means updating your understanding continuously. It's the law that keeps scientists humble, philosophers employed, and everyone else slightly uncomfortable.
Example: "He wanted a simple truth about why his life felt stuck. The law of dynamics-complexity of truth said: your life is dynamic (constantly changing) and complex (multiple interacting factors). Any simple truth—'you're lazy,' 'the economy's bad,' 'it's fate'—would be false because it ignores the dynamics and complexity. The truth was in the interactions, the patterns, the emergence. He wanted a label; the law gave him a system. He left frustrated but slightly wiser."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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A proposed solution to the problems of falsifiability and demarcation in philosophy of science: for something to be scientific, it must be dynamic (changing over time, responsive to evidence) and/or complex (involving interacting variables, emergent properties, systemic behavior). This law distinguishes science from static dogma (which doesn't change) and from simplistic claims (which ignore complexity). A dynamic science evolves with evidence; a complex science acknowledges that simple answers are rarely adequate. The Law of Dynamics and Complexities doesn't replace falsifiability but supplements it, recognizing that some scientific truths are not simple propositions but evolving understandings of complex systems.
Law of Dynamics and Complexities of Science Example: "He argued that economics wasn't a science because it couldn't make precise predictions. She invoked the Law of Dynamics and Complexities: economics studies dynamic, complex systems—human behavior, social institutions, global interactions. Its scientific status comes not from prediction but from its dynamic responsiveness to evidence and its acknowledgment of complexity. It's different from physics, but still science—just science of a different kind."
by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
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The principle that the simplest explanation is not always the correct one—the direct counter to Occam's Razor (the law of parsimony). The Law of Hidden Dynamics and Complexities states that reality often contains unseen layers, interacting variables, and emergent properties that simple explanations miss. A complex explanation may be necessary precisely because the phenomenon is complex. This law is essential in systems thinking, ecology, sociology, and any field where surface simplicity conceals deep intricacy. It's the justification for not settling for easy answers, for digging deeper, for respecting that some things are complicated because they are complicated.
Example: "He wanted a simple explanation for why poverty persisted despite decades of anti-poverty programs. Occam's Razor would say 'the programs don't work.' The Law of Hidden Dynamics and Complexities said: look deeper—interacting factors of race, class, geography, history, policy, culture, and global economics create dynamics no simple explanation captures. The simple answer felt satisfying; the complex answer was true. He chose truth, which is harder but better."
by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
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complexicities

states of confusing cultures which includes civilizations and their establishments including cities and countries.
its difficult to understand the complexicities of the Egyptian Civilization.
by prans April 14, 2008
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Compleximplicity

Compleximplicity is the state of being confused. It of course derives from the two words complexed and simplicity. Its mostly used by people in songs, or in the streets of london.
Trexx : Oi blud, u know that gurl i was linkin wiv last week?

Tyrone : Yeh fam

Trexx : Turns out that her brother was sleepin wiv her but she didnt know that it was her brother and her brother is the ghost of a kitty that died in 1984, thier mum wich only her bro knew cried alot and then thier dad that only the gurl i was linkin wiv knew came in and said "Luke, I am your father".

Tyrone : wow... thats compleximplicity.

or...

MC Poodle : My gels all low, shes not in the flow, go get sum shoes hoe, and walk out the door. My life in the city, little britain likes bitty, so blud, you can call this compleximplicity.
by Jay Tremain August 15, 2008
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