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A model of the mind proposing that cognition itself is a fractal process. A single thought contains the pattern of a whole line of reasoning. A moment of perception is structured like a whole memory. The way you solve a small, trivial problem (like a typo) is a miniature, faster version of how you solve a major life crisis. The brain is not a computer with different programs, but a single, infinitely complex pattern-generator, creating self-similar structures of thought at every level of consciousness.
Fractalism (Cognitive Sciences) "The way you panicked over that typo in your email—the frantic search for a solution, the blame-shifting, the eventual acceptance—was the exact same pattern as how you handled your last breakup. Your brain doesn't have different 'crisis modules'; it just runs the same fractal pattern on different-sized inputs."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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In the study of mind and brain, spectral variables are the unmeasured factors that shape cognitive performance, neural activity, and behavioral data. These include the participant's caffeine level, whether they ate breakfast, their mood from a text received right before the study, their unconscious expectations about what the researcher wants, and the entire lifetime of experience that precedes the 45 minutes they spend in your lab. Cognitive science that ignores spectral variables mistakes the brain in the scanner for the brain in the world. The ghosts are always there, whispering to your subjects while you measure their reaction times.
Spectral Variables (Cognitive Sciences) "We thought we were measuring working memory capacity. But the Spectral Variables were doing the work: participants who'd slept well performed better, participants who'd argued with their partner performed worse, and one guy was just really stressed about his cat. Our 'pure' measure was haunted by life."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 23, 2026
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The foundational insight that studying human meaning, culture, and society requires attending to the ghosts that quantitative methods miss. These spectral variables include historical trauma that shapes community responses, unspoken power dynamics in an interview, the researcher's own positionality relative to those studied, the language gaps that lose meaning in translation, and the silenced voices that never make it into the archive. In social sciences and humanities, spectral variables aren't noise to be eliminated—they're the signal, or at least the key to understanding what the signal means. Good humanistic research maps the ghosts rather than pretending they aren't there.
Spectral Variables (Social Sciences and Humanities) "Your survey data shows 80% satisfaction. But the Spectral Variables tell a different story: people were afraid to be honest with government researchers, the translator softened critical responses, and the community's historical experience with surveys made them tell you what they thought you wanted. Your data is accurate and completely wrong—haunted by ghosts you never asked about."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 23, 2026
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Critical Social Sciences

The application of critical theory to the study of society: examining how power, ideology, and social structures shape human life, and how knowledge about society can serve emancipatory interests. Critical Social Sciences don't just describe society—they critique it, revealing oppression, exposing ideology, and working toward transformation. Sociology, anthropology, political science, and economics, when done critically, become tools for understanding and changing unjust structures, not just documenting them.
"Your study describes inequality, but Critical Social Sciences ask: why does it exist? Who benefits? How could it be different? Description without critique is just photography of a car crash—interesting but useless to the victims."
by Abzugal February 23, 2026
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Critical Cognitive Sciences

The application of critical theory to the study of mind and brain: examining how cognitive science's assumptions, methods, and findings are shaped by cultural context, power relations, and social structures. Critical Cognitive Science asks: whose mind is being studied? Whose brain counts as "normal"? How do cognitive categories (intelligence, rationality, mental illness) serve social control? It's cognitive science forced to confront that minds don't exist in a vacuum—they're shaped by, and shape, the social world.
"Your study defines 'rationality' in Western terms and finds Western subjects more rational. Critical Cognitive Sciences asks: what if you defined rationality differently? What if your 'universal' mind is actually a specific cultural product? Your findings aren't wrong—they're just less universal than you think."
by Abzugal February 23, 2026
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Theory of Dynamic Sciences

The application of dynamic frameworks to the plurality of sciences—recognizing that different sciences evolve at different rates, through different dynamics, with different patterns of change. Dynamic Sciences studies how physics changes differently from biology, how ecology evolves differently from chemistry, how each science has its own rhythm of revolution and revision. It's not one story of scientific change; it's many stories, each with its own dynamics. This theory respects the diversity of sciences while recognizing that all are dynamic—just dynamically different.
Theory of Dynamic Sciences "Physics and ecology both change, but differently. Dynamic Sciences studies these differences: physics through paradigm shifts, ecology through gradual integration. Same dynamic principle, different dynamics. Science isn't one thing changing one way; it's many sciences changing many ways. Dynamic Sciences maps the diversity."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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Theory of Complex Sciences

The application of complex systems thinking to the plurality of sciences—recognizing that sciences themselves form a complex system, with emergent properties, nonlinear interactions, and unpredictable developments. Complex Sciences studies how different fields interact, how discoveries in one cascade through others, how new disciplines emerge from old ones. It's not just that each science is complex; it's that the sciences together form a complex system—a web of knowledge practices that evolves in ways no single science controls.
Theory of Complex Sciences "Molecular biology didn't just grow; it emerged from physics, chemistry, and biology interacting. That's Complex Sciences—new fields emerging from the web of existing ones. Sciences aren't isolated; they're connected, and those connections generate novelty. The system is complex, and complexity produces emergence."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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