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The ability to analyze how social structures, institutions, and power relations shape what counts as reasonable. It draws on the sociology of knowledge and science to show that standards of rationality vary across social contexts, are enforced by professional communities, and can serve to exclude certain groups. This literacy reveals that who gets to define “rational” is itself a question of power.
Example: “Her sociology of reason and rationality literacy helped her expose how the label ‘irrational’ was applied to protest movements—not because their demands lacked reason, but because their forms of reasoning didn’t fit the elite institutions where ‘rational’ was defined.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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The ability to engage with philosophical debates about the nature, scope, and foundations of reason and rationality. It covers questions about the relationship between reason and emotion, the role of values in reasoning, the possibility of universal reason, and the historical development of rational ideals. This literacy enables one to critically assess foundational claims about what reason is and to recognize that appeals to “reason” often smuggle in philosophical assumptions.
Philosophy of Reason and Rationality Literacy Example: “His literacy in the philosophy of reason and rationality let him see that the ‘rational actor’ model in economics was a philosophical choice, not a description of human nature—one that had been contested for centuries.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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A normative framework arguing that for reasoning to be genuinely rational, its premises, methods, and assumptions must be made explicit and open to scrutiny. It rejects hidden assumptions, appeals to authority, or reliance on “common sense” that cannot be articulated. The theory demands that any claim to rationality be accompanied by a transparent account of how the conclusion was reached, enabling genuine evaluation and critique. It is a cornerstone of critical thinking, academic integrity, and accountable governance.
Theory of Rational Transparency Example: “His policy proposal lacked rational transparency—the numbers were there, but the assumptions behind them were buried. When exposed, the model collapsed under scrutiny.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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A branch of philosophy that investigates the nature, scope, and foundations of reason and rationality. It explores questions like: What is the difference between theoretical and practical rationality? Are there universal principles of reason? How do emotions relate to reason? Can rationality be formalized? It also examines historical conceptions of reason from ancient Greek logos to Enlightenment Vernunft to contemporary cognitive science, and critiques of reason from postmodernism, feminism, and decolonial thought.
Example: “His work in the philosophy of reason and rationality challenged the assumption that rationality is solely a matter of logical consistency, arguing that good reasoning must also be context‑sensitive and value‑attentive.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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A field that examines how conceptions of reason and rationality are socially produced, contested, and institutionalized. It studies how rationality standards vary across cultures, professions, and historical periods; how institutions enforce particular rationalities (e.g., market rationality in economics, algorithmic rationality in tech); and how claims to rationality can serve as forms of social power. It challenges the notion of a single, universal rationality, showing instead that rationalities are multiple and socially embedded.
Example: “The sociology of reason and rationality revealed that the ‘rational choice’ model in economics was not a discovery of universal human nature but a product of Cold War social science that later remade real human behavior.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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The study of reason and rationality as culturally embedded practices, not universal cognitive templates. It investigates how different societies define what counts as reasonable, how reasoning is taught and enacted in everyday life, and how rationality claims are used to establish authority. Drawing on ethnography, it shows that the Western ideal of dispassionate, individualist reason is one cultural model among many, coexisting with relational, embodied, or collective rationalities. It also examines how rationality is performed in institutions like courts, labs, and corporations.
Anthropology of Reason and Rationality Example: “Her anthropology of rationality research showed that in a corporate boardroom, what counted as ‘rational decision‑making’ was shaped by gendered expectations—male assertiveness was seen as logical, female caution as emotional.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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Tit to arm ratio

A phrase referring to the proportional relationship between a woman’s breast size and her arms or hands. It’s considered a "nice tit-to-arm ratio" when her breasts are slightly larger than her arms, creating a balanced yet noticeable contrast. The expression gained prominence on Reddit following its use by user "dog-on-meth" in reference to the popular streamer "susu jpg."
I mean look at her tit to arm ratio, i would totally travel for that
by radiosmoke February 23, 2025
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