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Frequency Sciences

The interdisciplinary collection of fields that use frequency as a primary lens for investigation. This includes: Cymatics (the study of visible sound), Radionics (the controversial claim that disease can be diagnosed and treated via frequency patterns), Archaeoacoustics (studying the acoustic properties of ancient sites), and Astroseismology (probing stellar interiors by studying starquake oscillations). It's the pursuit of knowledge through the logic of waves and rhythms, often at the fringes of mainstream science.
Frequency Sciences Example: Researchers studying the Great Pyramid of Giza to see if its inner chambers are tuned to specific resonant frequencies that might have had ritual or energetic purposes are engaging in a Frequency Science (archaeoacoustics). They treat the ancient structure not just as a tomb, but as a potential acoustic device or resonator.
by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026
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Field Science

The practice of applying the authority and methods of science to define and control a specific social, political, or cultural arena (the "field"). It's not about studying a field, but of creating a scientific domain where none existed before, often to legitimize intervention. This involves declaring a human activity (e.g., dating, parenting) a proper subject for scientific management, thereby elevating data-driven experts over lived experience.
Field Science Example: The rise of "Sleep Science" as a field used to dictate parenting. Experts use studies to proclaim the "one scientifically correct" way for a baby to sleep, turning parental intuition and cultural practices into "dangerous myths." The field justifies intrusive monitoring (baby sleep trackers) and creates anxiety, framing adherence to its protocols as moral responsibility.
by Dumuabzu February 8, 2026
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Field Sciences

The collective body of disciplines that emerge from the process of Field Science. These are the organized, institutionalized knowledge systems that now govern areas of life once ruled by tradition, art, or personal choice. They produce the experts, journals, and metrics that define normalcy within their claimed territory.
Field Sciences Example: "Nutritional Science," "Exercise Science," and "Happiness Science" (positive psychology). Together, these field sciences have turned the basic human acts of eating, moving, and feeling into highly technical domains requiring expert guidance. They generate constantly shifting, often contradictory commandments that pathologize intuitive living.
by Dumuabzu February 8, 2026
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Fractal Sciences

The collective term for the diverse fields that use fractal geometry and scaling analysis as primary investigative tools. This includes fractal physiology (diagnosing disease from heartbeat fractal scaling), fractal geology (characterizing porosity of oil reservoirs), fractal image compression, fractal antenna design, and fractal statistical mechanics. Fractal Sciences share a common methodology: quantify the scale-invariant properties of a system, and use those exponents as fingerprints of underlying generative processes.
Fractal Sciences Example: A cardiologist practicing Fractal Science doesn't just count heartbeats; they analyze the fractal scaling of inter-beat intervals. A healthy heart's rhythm is not metronomic but exhibits complex, long-range correlations across multiple timescales. Disease (heart failure, atrial fibrillation) often manifests as a loss of this fractal complexitythe signal becomes either too random or too periodic. The fractal dimension becomes a diagnostic vital sign.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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Lobbying Science

A systematic corruption of the scientific process where organized interest groups—corporate, political, or ideological—fund, produce, and disseminate research specifically engineered to influence policy and public opinion in their favor. Unlike genuine scientific inquiry, which follows questions wherever they lead, Lobbying Science starts with a predetermined conclusion and reverse-engineers the "evidence" to support it. It maintains the aesthetic of peer-reviewed legitimacy while functioning as a public relations arm. This includes funding friendly academics, ghostwriting papers, suppressing unfavorable results, and creating front organizations with neutral-sounding names to launder biased conclusions.
Example: A fossil fuel conglomerate funds a "Global Climate Research Institute" that publishes studies emphasizing natural climate variability and downplaying anthropogenic causes. Their scientists sit on IPCC panels, their papers appear in reputable journals, and their findings are cited by sympathetic politicians. This isn't science serving truth; it's Lobbying Science—the research arm of a political war, dressed in a lab coat and holding a clipboard.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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Geodynamic Sciences

The formal academic discipline dedicated to studying the profound, and often inexplicable, influence of inanimate geological features on human behavior and social structures. While officially about planetary processes, in practice, it's the field of justifying why certain people are "rock solid" and others are "shifting sands." It involves complex modeling to predict how a person’s foundation—their "bedrock" principles—will hold up under the pressure of life's "tectonic" stresses, such as a mortgage or a surprise visit from in-laws.
Example: "Professor Albright published a groundbreaking paper in Geodynamic Sciences this week, definitively proving that my ex-boyfriend's personality wasn't just emotionally unavailable—it was geologically unstable, prone to both pyroclastic outbursts and glacial withdrawal."
by Dumu The Void February 14, 2026
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Social Sciences of Gemology

An interdisciplinary field that combines anthropology, economics, and political science to understand humanity's long and complicated relationship with minerals. It studies the trade routes of ancient civilizations as determined by their lust for lapis lazuli, the role of emeralds in colonial exploitation, and the modern-day geopolitics of "blood diamonds." It views the history of gemstones not as a series of pretty objects, but as a primary driver of human migration, conflict, and cultural exchange.
Example: "Her thesis for the social sciences of gemology was a riveting look at how the discovery of gold in California didn't just create wealth; it fundamentally restructured the region's demographics, accelerated the genocide of Native peoples, and cemented the '49er as a new kind of American folk hero, all because of a shiny yellow metal."
by Dumu The Void February 14, 2026
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