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Supernatural Engineering

The practice of designing and constructing systems, structures, or rituals intended to harness, contain, or repel supernatural forces. This includes building churches on ley lines, designing exorcism protocols that actually work (spoiler: they don't, but they're dramatic), and creating "protected" spaces that vampires theoretically cannot enter (tested on zero actual vampires). Supernatural engineering faces the unique challenge that the forces being engineered are unpredictable, the materials are untested, and the building inspector is a priest who may or may not have the authority to approve your demon-proof barrier.
Supernatural Engineering Example: "He spent years supernaturally engineering the perfect haunted house attraction, using actual occult symbols and historically accurate rituals to create 'authentic' paranormal energy. The result was a perfectly safe, mildly spooky house that no ghosts visited, because ghosts, it turns out, are not impressed by historical accuracy and prefer places with better ambiance, like abandoned asylums."
Supernatural Engineering by Nammugal February 14, 2026
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Supernaturalism

The belief in realities that transcend the natural world—gods, spirits, miracles, realms beyond the physical. Supernaturalism holds that nature is not all that exists; there is something beyond, above, or outside the natural order that can interact with it. Unlike Extraphysicalism (which suggests continuity), Supernaturalism often implies discontinuity: the supernatural is categorically different, operating by different rules, accessible through different means. It's the worldview of most religions, many spiritual traditions, and anyone who believes in realities that cannot be naturalized.
"You think prayer is just self-soothing? Supernaturalism says: there's literally something listening, something beyond nature, something that can respond. Not metaphor, not psychological projection—actual supernatural agency. You don't have to believe it, but millions do, and their experience isn't nothing."
Supernaturalism by Dumu The Void February 24, 2026

Supernaturalism

The belief in realities that transcend and can intervene in the natural world—gods, spirits, miracles, divine agency. Unlike Extranaturalism (which posits an exterior that may not interact), Supernaturalism emphasizes interaction: the supernatural can and does affect natural events. Prayers are answered, miracles occur, spirits intervene, divine will shapes history. Supernaturalism is the worldview of most theistic religions, many spiritual traditions, and anyone who believes that there is something beyond nature that cares about and acts within nature. It's the position that the universe is not a closed system, that the boundaries between natural and supernatural are permeable, and that help can come from outside.
"Science can't explain why I survived that accident when I should have died. Supernaturalism says: maybe something beyond nature intervened. Not coincidence, not luck—actual agency from outside the natural order. You don't have to believe it, but millions do, and their experiences of rescue feel as real as anything science measures."
Supernaturalism by Dumu The Void February 24, 2026

Hard Problem of Supernaturality

The difficulty of defining and then detecting the "supernatural." If something exists and interacts with our world (a ghost moves an object, a prayer is answered), then by interacting, it becomes part of nature's cause-and-effect chain and should, in theory, be natural and measurable. Calling it "supernatural" often just means "we can't explain it with our current models." The term becomes a moving target, a placeholder for mystery that retreats from any advancing scientific understanding.
Example: "The ghost hunter said the cold spot was 'supernatural.' The physicist said it was a draft. The hard problem of supernaturality: if the ghost's presence causes the draft, then it's a natural phenomenon, just an unknown one. The word 'supernatural' seems to mean 'we stop investigating here because it's spooky.'"

Theory of the Supernatural Spectrum

The theory that supernatural phenomena exist on a spectrum, not as a binary category. The Supernatural Spectrum recognizes that claims about gods, spirits, miracles, and the like vary enormously in their content, plausibility, and relationship to natural explanation. A miracle that violates known laws of physics is on one end; a spiritual experience that could have natural explanations is on another. The spectrum allows for distinguishing between different kinds and degrees of supernatural claims, for evaluating them on multiple dimensions rather than simply accepting or rejecting them wholesale. It's the framework for thinking clearly about things that may or may not exceed natural explanation.
Example: "He dismissed all supernatural claims as equally absurd. The Theory of the Supernatural Spectrum showed why that was crude: a claim that prayer healed was different from a claim that the dead rose—different evidence, different plausibility, different relationship to natural explanation. The spectrum let him evaluate, not just dismiss."

The 8 Axes of the Supernatural Spectrum

A framework for evaluating supernatural claims along eight key dimensions. The 8 axes are: 1) Natural Explanation (whether natural explanations exist), 2) Evidential Support (how much evidence supports it), 3) Internal Consistency (whether the claim is coherent), 4) Cross-Cultural Presence (whether it appears across cultures), 5) Historical Precedent (whether similar claims have been made), 6) Psychological Plausibility (whether psychology can explain it), 7) Sociological Function (what social role it serves), and 8) Personal Experience (whether people report experiencing it). These axes allow for nuanced evaluation of supernatural claims.
The 8 Axes of the Supernatural Spectrum *Example: "The vision claim was mapped on the 8 axes: low on natural explanation (none found), low on evidential support (only personal testimony), high on cross-cultural presence (visions reported everywhere), high on psychological plausibility (well-understood phenomenon). The axes showed why it couldn't be simply dismissed or accepted—it was complicated."*

The 16 Axes of the Supernatural Spectrum

An expanded framework adding eight dimensions for more nuanced supernatural evaluation. The additional axes include: 9) Explanatory Power (what it explains), 10) Moral Implications (what ethics follow from it), 11) Institutional Support (whether institutions back it), 12) Historical Impact (how it shaped history), 13) Artistic Expression (how it appears in art), 14) Ritual Practice (what practices surround it), 15) Experiential Quality (what it feels like), and 16) Transformation Potential (whether it changes lives). The 16 axes provide comprehensive supernatural analysis.
The 16 Axes of the Supernatural Spectrum *Example: "The near-death experience was mapped on all 16 axes: low on natural explanation (not fully explained), medium on evidential support (many reports, hard to verify), high on psychological plausibility, high on experiential quality, high on transformation potential. The axes captured why it mattered to people—even if it couldn't be proven supernatural."*