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Metaphilosophy of Science

The philosophical examination of the philosophy of science itself—the study of how we study science. Metaphilosophy of Science asks meta-questions: What are the methods of philosophy of science? Is it descriptive or normative? How does it relate to history and sociology of science? Is it making progress? What counts as a good theory in philosophy of science? Metaphilosophy of Science is philosophy of science's self-reflection—the discipline that keeps it from becoming dogmatic by forcing it to examine its own assumptions.
"You're debating Kuhn vs. Popper. Metaphilosophy of Science asks: why are these the options? Who decides what counts as a good philosophy of science? How does philosophy of science itself change over time? You're so deep in the debate you haven't asked what the debate is for. Step back—that's metaphilosophy of science."
by Dumu The Void March 2, 2026
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Theory of Dynamic Science

A framework for understanding science as fundamentally dynamic—constantly evolving, paradigms shifting, methods changing, and knowledge transforming rather than simply accumulating. Dynamic Science rejects the view of science as a steady accumulation of facts, instead seeing it as a living process of revolution, revision, and renewal. Paradigms shift (Kuhn), research programs evolve (Lakatos), and whole ways of doing science become obsolete. Dynamic Science studies these movements: how science changes, what drives transformation, and what it means to do science in a world where science itself is never still.
Theory of Dynamic Science "You think science just adds knowledge. Dynamic Science says: look at history—paradigms shift, revolutions happen, whole theories are replaced. Science doesn't just grow; it transforms. What physicists knew in 1900 isn't a subset of what they know now; it's a different world. Science is dynamic, not cumulative."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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Theory of Complex Science

A framework for understanding science as a complex system—emergent, interconnected, nonlinear, and irreducible to simple rules. Complex Science recognizes that science isn't just methods and results; it's a web of practices, institutions, technologies, and communities that interact in unpredictable ways. Small changes can cascade; stable paradigms can suddenly shift; the whole is more than the sum of parts. Complex Science studies these dynamics: how scientific knowledge emerges from interactions, how it stabilizes, how it transforms. It's science studies informed by complexity theory—seeing science not as a machine but as an ecosystem.
Theory of Complex Science "You want a simple model of how science works. Complex Science says: there isn't one. Science is a complex system—labs, journals, funding, education, all interacting. Change one part and the whole shifts. Simple rules don't capture it; complex dynamics do. Science isn't a machine; it's an ecosystem."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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A synthesis of dynamic and complex frameworks, understanding science as an evolving complex system—constantly changing through nonlinear interactions, emergent patterns, and transformative shifts. Dynamic-Complex Science recognizes that science is both dynamic (paradigms shift) and complex (everything connects). Change isn't linear; it's emergent. Transformations cascade through webs of practice, institution, and technology in unpredictable ways. This theory studies how science evolves—not just what changes, but how change happens in systems too interconnected for simple cause and effect. It's science studies for a world where science is alive, connected, and always becoming.
Theory of Dynamic-Complex Science "The replication crisis didn't just affect psychology—it cascaded through methods, publishing, funding, trust. That's Dynamic-Complex Science—a change that rippled through the whole system. Science isn't a collection of labs; it's an ecosystem, and ecosystems respond to shocks in ways you can't predict from single causes."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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Theory of Spectral Science

A framework for understanding science as haunted by what it excludes—the ghosts of forgotten questions, suppressed findings, marginalized researchers, and paths not taken. Spectral Science recognizes that every scientific paradigm has a shadow: what it can't see, won't admit, or has actively excluded. These ghosts haunt the present, shaping what can be studied by marking what can't. Spectral Science studies these hauntings: not to exorcise them (impossible) but to make them visible, to remember that every scientific truth is built on forgotten unknowns, every paradigm on suppressed alternatives. It's science studies that attends to absence, silence, and the ghosts that always accompany discovery.
Theory of Spectral Science "Genetics knows a lot, but it's haunted by the eugenics that shaped its early history. That's Spectral Science—the ghosts of excluded ethics haunting the present. Not to dismiss genetics, but to remember that science always has a shadow. What we study is built on what we forgot, ignored, or suppressed. The ghosts are always there."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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A framework for understanding science as fundamentally context-dependent—what counts as good science, which methods are appropriate, and what standards apply all shift with context. Contextualist Science recognizes that science isn't context-free; it's always science-in-a-situation, science-for-a-purpose. Methods that work in physics may not work in ecology; standards that fit lab experiments may not fit field studies. Contextualist Science studies these shifts—how context shapes scientific practice, and what that means for scientific knowledge. It's science studies that takes seriously the diversity of scientific contexts.
Theory of Contextualist Science "You demand randomized controlled trials for everything. Contextualist Science says: RCTs work in some contexts, not others. Epidemiology uses different methods than particle physics; ecology uses different methods than molecular biology. Context matters. Science isn't one method; it's methods adapted to contexts. Contextualism isn't relativism—it's just paying attention."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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A framework for understanding science as always from some perspective—never from nowhere, always from somewhere. Perspectivist Science recognizes that all scientific knowing is situated: shaped by the researcher's location, values, training, and commitments. There's no view from nowhere, no value-free science. But situated doesn't mean biased—it means located. And locations can be compared, combined, critiqued. Perspectivist Science studies how perspective shapes research, how to integrate multiple perspectives, and how to build scientific knowledge that acknowledges its own situatedness.
Theory of Perspectivist Science "You think science is objective, value-free. Perspectivist Science says: science is done by people with perspectives—shaped by funding, culture, training. That's not a flaw; it's the reality. The question isn't whether science has perspective—it's whether we know what it is. Perspective isn't bias; it's the condition of doing science."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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