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Even in the hardest sciences—physics, chemistry, mathematics—spectral variables operate, though they're often harder to see. They include the material history of your equipment (was that laser calibrated correctly?), the human factors in "exact" measurements (who read the dial and were they squinting?), the theoretical assumptions baked into your instruments (your detector is built on theories that might be wrong), and the metaphysical commitments that shape what questions seem worth asking (why this phenomenon and not that one?). The natural sciences achieve their precision not by eliminating spectral variables—impossible—but by developing elaborate rituals to keep the ghosts at bay, knowing they can never fully succeed.
Spectral Variables (Natural and Exact Sciences) "You think particle physics is pure? Every result is haunted by Spectral Variables: the grad students keeping the detector running on three hours of sleep, the funding decisions that prioritized some experiments over others, the theoretical biases in your data analysis software. The numbers are exact; the ghosts are infinite."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 23, 2026
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The application of Critical Theory to the natural sciences—biology, chemistry, physics, and fields studying the natural world—examining how they're shaped by social forces and how they can serve domination or liberation. Critical Theory of Natural Sciences asks: How have natural sciences been used to justify racism, sexism, colonialism? How do funding and institutional power shape research agendas? Could natural sciences be practiced differently—more democratically, more ecologically, more justly? Drawing on feminist science studies, postcolonial science studies, and environmental justice, it insists that natural sciences are never just natural—they're social through and through.
"Science is science, they say. Critical Theory of Natural Sciences asks: whose science? Funded by whom? For what purposes? Biology justified eugenics; medicine experimented on enslaved people. Natural sciences have histories of harm. That doesn't make them wrong; it makes them human. Critical theory insists on remembering those histories—and building science that doesn't repeat them."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
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The application of Critical Theory to concepts of human nature—examining how claims about what humans "naturally" are reflect social values and serve political interests. Critical Theory of Human Nature asks: Why are certain traits called "natural"? Who benefits from defining humans as competitive, selfish, aggressive? Could human nature include plasticity, cooperation, solidarity? How have claims about human nature been used to justify inequality? It doesn't deny that humans have biological constraints but insists that "human nature" is never just descriptive—it's always prescriptive, always political.
"Humans are naturally competitive, they say. Critical Theory of Human Nature asks: naturally? Or socialized under capitalism? Humans cooperate too, share too, care too. Which 'nature' you emphasize reflects your politics. Critical theory insists on asking: who benefits from the 'selfish gene' story? And what would change if we told different stories about who we are?"
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
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The theory that "naturalness" exists on a spectrum, not as a binary category. What counts as natural varies across contexts, cultures, and historical periods—things once considered natural (slavery, patriarchy) are now seen as social constructions; things once considered unnatural (homosexuality, women working) are now recognized as natural variations. The Natural Spectrum recognizes that naturalness is not a property of things themselves but of their relationship to cultural categories, scientific understanding, and historical context. A smartphone is unnatural in one sense (not found in nature) but natural in another (made from natural materials by natural beings). The theory calls for mapping where phenomena fall on multiple axes of naturalness.
Example: "He argued about what was 'natural' as if it were simple. The Theory of the Natural Spectrum showed why it wasn't: a virus was natural in one sense (biological), unnatural in another (harmful), natural in another (evolutionary product). The spectrum revealed that 'natural' was doing many jobs, not one."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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A framework for evaluating naturalness along eight key dimensions. The 8 axes are: 1) Biological Origin (whether it comes from living things), 2) Human Intervention (how much humans modified it), 3) Evolutionary History (whether it has evolutionary precedent), 4) Cultural Construction (how much it's shaped by culture), 5) Scientific Explanation (how well science explains it), 6) Historical Continuity (whether it has historical precedent), 7) Cross-Cultural Presence (whether it appears across cultures), and 8) Essentialist Belief (whether people think it's essential). These axes allow for nuanced evaluation of naturalness.
The 8 Axes of the Natural Spectrum Example: "They debated whether organic food was 'more natural.' The 8 axes showed: biological origin (yes), human intervention (less than conventional, but still present), evolutionary history (plants evolved, farming didn't), cultural construction (the whole category is constructed). The axes explained why the debate never ended—'natural' meant different things on different axes."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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An expanded framework adding eight dimensions for more nuanced naturalness evaluation. The additional axes include: 9) Indigenous Knowledge (how it's categorized in different knowledge systems), 10) Religious Classification (whether it's seen as God-given), 11) Legal Status (how law treats it), 12) Economic Value (how it's valued in markets), 13) Aesthetic Judgment (whether it's seen as beautiful), 14) Moral Loading (whether it's seen as good or bad), 15) Purity Discourse (whether it's seen as pure), and 16) Nostalgia Connection (whether it's linked to idealized past). The 16 axes provide comprehensive naturalness analysis.
The 16 Axes of the Natural Spectrum Example: "The GMO debate was mapped on all 16 axes: high on human intervention, low on evolutionary history, contested on moral loading, high on economic value, mixed on religious classification. The axes showed why people talked past each other—they were on different axes, using 'natural' to mean different things."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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