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The principle that scientific status exists on a spectrum—fields aren't simply "science" or "not science" but occupy different positions on a continuum from "hard science" (physics, chemistry) through "soft science" (psychology, sociology) to "borderline science" (some forms of economics) to "not really science" (theology, astrology). This law acknowledges that the boundaries between science and non-science are fuzzy, that fields can move along the spectrum over time, and that the question isn't "is it science?" but "where on the scientific spectrum does it fall?" The law of the spectrum of sciences goes hand in hand with the theory of the same name, providing the meta-framework for understanding why some departments get more funding than others and why physicists look down on sociologists (they're just farther along the spectrum, or think they are).
Example: "He declared that psychology wasn't a real science. She invoked the law of the spectrum of sciences: 'It's not that psychology isn't science; it's that it's on a different part of the spectrum than physics. Different methods, different objects of study, different standards. The spectrum includes both. Your binary thinking is the problem.' He said physics was still better. She said that wasn't the question."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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The comprehensive framework proposing that all fields of inquiry exist on a multidimensional spectrum defined by axes including: mathematical rigor, experimental control, predictive power, reproducibility, and objectivity. This theory explains why mathematics is at one end (maximal rigor, minimal empirical content) and literary criticism at the other (minimal rigor, maximal interpretation), with everything else distributed in between. The theory of the spectrum of sciences acknowledges that "science" isn't a binary category but a region of spectral space, with fuzzy boundaries, contested territories, and ongoing border disputes. It's the theory that makes peace between warring departments by saying, "You're all on the spectrum—just different parts of it."
Example: "She used the theory of the spectrum of sciences to calm a faculty meeting where physics and sociology were fighting over funding. 'You're both on the spectrum,' she said. 'Physics is high on the mathematical-rigor axis; sociology is high on the real-world-relevance axis. Different coordinates, same spectral space. Can we share?' They couldn't, but at least they understood why they were fighting."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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The principle that the sciences operate in two modes: absolute science (knowledge that would be valid for any rational being, anywhere, anytime) and relative science (knowledge that is valid within human frameworks, for human purposes, under human limitations). The law acknowledges that some scientific knowledge aspires to universality—the laws of physics, the structure of DNA, the composition of stars. Other scientific knowledge is context-dependent—medical knowledge that applies to some populations but not others, ecological knowledge that varies by region, social science knowledge that reflects particular cultures. The law of absolute and relative sciences reconciles the ambition of science to discover universal truths with the reality that all science is done by humans, in history, with limits.
Law of Absolute and Relative Sciences Example: "She studied the law of absolute and relative sciences while working in global health. Some knowledge was absolute—the biology of disease, the chemistry of drugs. Other knowledge was relative—what interventions worked depended on culture, infrastructure, beliefs. The absolute science told her what could work; the relative science told her what would work here."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 16, 2026
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The principle that science itself—the enterprise, the institution, the practice—operates in two modes: absolute science (the idealized pursuit of universal truth, free from human limitations) and relative science (the actual human activity, shaped by history, culture, and politics). The law acknowledges that science aspires to the absolute—to describe reality as it is, independent of observers. But science is always practiced relatively—by humans with biases, in institutions with interests, through methods that reflect particular times and places. The law of absolute and relative science reconciles the ideal with the reality, allowing us to trust science while understanding its limits. Science is the best tool we have, not because it's perfect but because it's self-correcting.
Law of Absolute and Relative Science Example: "He invoked the law of absolute and relative science when critics said science was just another belief system. 'Absolute science is the ideal—knowledge independent of humans. Relative science is what we actually do—messy, human, fallible. The ideal guides the practice; the practice approaches the ideal. It's not perfect, but it's the only game in town.' The critics weren't convinced, but they had no better game."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 16, 2026
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A proposed solution to the problems of falsifiability and demarcation in philosophy of science: for something to be scientific, it must be dynamic (changing over time, responsive to evidence) and/or complex (involving interacting variables, emergent properties, systemic behavior). This law distinguishes science from static dogma (which doesn't change) and from simplistic claims (which ignore complexity). A dynamic science evolves with evidence; a complex science acknowledges that simple answers are rarely adequate. The Law of Dynamics and Complexities doesn't replace falsifiability but supplements it, recognizing that some scientific truths are not simple propositions but evolving understandings of complex systems.
Law of Dynamics and Complexities of Science Example: "He argued that economics wasn't a science because it couldn't make precise predictions. She invoked the Law of Dynamics and Complexities: economics studies dynamic, complex systems—human behavior, social institutions, global interactions. Its scientific status comes not from prediction but from its dynamic responsiveness to evidence and its acknowledgment of complexity. It's different from physics, but still science—just science of a different kind."
by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
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The notoriously messy toolkit used to study human behavior, which refuses to sit still for clean measurement like chemicals or cells. These methods include surveys (asking people what they do, getting what they say they do), interviews (asking deeply, getting complicated stories), ethnography (living with people until they forget you're watching), statistical analysis (finding patterns in chaos), and case studies (going deep on one thing, sacrificing breadth). Unlike physics, social science methods must grapple with reflexive subjects who change when studied, cultural contexts that shift meaning, and the small problem that the researchers are also humans with biases. It's science, but science with feelings.
"I tried to apply the Methods of Study in the Social Sciences to my family Thanksgiving. Let's just say participant observation gets awkward when your participants know you're observing and demand to know what you're writing."
by Dumu The Void February 23, 2026
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A framework acknowledging that scientific findings are always relative to the conditions under which they were produced—the instruments available, the cultural assumptions of the researchers, the historical moment, even the language used to describe them. This isn't the claim that "everything is relative" in the pop sense, but rather that science must account for its own situatedness. A result from 1950s America with male researchers and male subjects isn't universally valid without checking. Relativistic Method doesn't abandon objectivity—it pursues it by factoring in the observer's position, like Einstein did with physics, but applied to knowledge itself.
Relativistic Scientific Method (Method of Relativity of Science) "Your 'universal' finding about human cognition came from studying 200 undergrads at your university. Relativistic Scientific Method says we need to specify: this finding is relative to WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic) populations, not humanity. Context matters."
by Dumu The Void February 23, 2026
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