The study of animal behavior that prioritizes the community or group as the fundamental unit of analysis, rather than the individual. Where a standard ethologist might ask how a specific bird learns its song, a communitarian ethologist asks how that song functions to maintain the cohesion and identity of the entire flock. It emphasizes belonging, shared rituals, and the ways individuals sacrifice personal interests for the stability and continuity of the collective.
Example: "The way the meerkats posted sentries while others fed wasn't just altruism; from a communitarian ethology perspective, it was the community maintaining its own defensive infrastructure."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the Communitarian Ethology mug.An area of study within metascience that examines science through the lens of ecology—as a complex, interconnected system with its own dynamics, niches, and relationships. Ecoscience asks how scientific communities function as ecosystems: how ideas compete for attention, how research niches emerge and evolve, how scientific "species" (disciplines, theories, methods) adapt to changing environments, how resources flow through the system, how extinctions happen when fields die out. It treats science as a living system—not a machine but an ecology, with all the complexity, interdependence, and emergent behavior that implies. Ecoscience reveals that scientific change is not just rational progress but ecological succession, driven by interactions between organisms (scientists) and their environments (institutions, funding, social contexts).
Ecoscience (Ecological) Example: "Her ecoscience analysis showed how a new research field emerged like a new ecological niche—pioneer species (early adopters), adaptive radiation (method diversification), and eventually stable communities (established disciplines) with their own internal dynamics."
by Dumu The Void March 16, 2026
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The study of a community's dual ecological environments. Internal ecology refers to the dynamics of relationships, roles, niches, and resource distribution within the community—its social ecosystem. External ecology is the community's relationship with its physical environment and other surrounding communities. The theory examines how changes in one ecology (e.g., external climate change) force adaptations in the other (internal social structure).
Example: A fishing village faces an external ecological shift: fish stocks collapse. Internal and External Ecology Theory analyzes how this forces a change in the internal ecology: the social role of "fisher" shrinks, new niches like "aquaculturist" or "tourist guide" emerge, and power dynamics shift away from fishing families. The two ecologies are in constant, stressful dialogue.
by Dumuabzu February 5, 2026
Get the Internal and External Ecology Theory mug.A framework for understanding systems by separating the environment inside a defined boundary from the environment outside it. Internal Ecology refers to the complex web of relationships, energy flows, and feedback loops within a system—like the microbiome in your gut, the culture inside a company, or the nutrient cycle in a sealed forest. External Ecology refers to the larger environment that surrounds and influences that system—the food you eat that affects your gut, the market that affects the company, or the climate that affects the forest. The health of any system depends on the balance between its internal dynamics and its external pressures.
Internal and External Ecology "The company's Internal Ecology was toxic—backstabbing and silos everywhere. But they ignored the External Ecology: a recession and a new competitor. You can't fix the fish tank's water if the whole room the tank is in is on fire."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 22, 2026
Get the Internal and External Ecology mug.A distinction between the pure theory of interconnected systems and its practical, dirty-hands use. General Ecology is the study of universal principles—how energy flows, how populations compete, how systems achieve stability. It's the math and physics of relationships. Applied Ecology is taking those principles and using them to solve real-world problems: restoring a damaged wetland, designing a sustainable city, managing a fishery so it doesn't collapse. It's the difference between knowing the formula for population growth (General) and actually counting the damn fish and dealing with the poachers (Applied).
General and Applied Ecology "My professor can talk for hours about the General Ecology of predator-prey dynamics. Me? I'm doing Applied Ecology, which is trying to keep the squirrels from eating every single tomato in my garden. The theory is elegant; the practice is a warzone."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 22, 2026
Get the General and Applied Ecology mug.A conceptual split, borrowing language from relativity, to categorize ecological thinking. General Ecology deals with the universal laws and principles that apply to all systems—the "theory of everything" for interconnectedness, like thermodynamics or network theory. Special Ecology deals with the specific, unique rules governing particular types of systems—like the ecology of a coral reef versus the ecology of a desert versus the ecology of an online community. General Ecology gives you the grammar; Special Ecology gives you the vocabulary for a specific place. You need both to speak the language of the planet fluently.
General and Special Ecology "General Ecology says every system needs an energy source. Special Ecology says the energy source for this coral reef is the sun, filtered through symbiotic algae, and if the water warms by two degrees, the whole thing dies. General gives you the big picture; Special keeps you from killing the thing you're studying."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 22, 2026
Get the General and Special Ecology mug.A framework combining social ecology's insight that ecological problems are rooted in social hierarchies with critical theory's analysis of power, ideology, and domination. Critical Social Ecology argues that environmental destruction cannot be understood apart from social domination—that the logic that exploits nature is the same logic that exploits humans. It examines how capitalism, patriarchy, racism, and colonialism shape environmental crises, and how ecological movements can either challenge or reproduce these hierarchies. Critical Social Ecology is both analytical (understanding root causes) and political (imagining alternatives).
Critical Social Ecology "You can't solve climate change without addressing inequality. Critical Social Ecology says: the same systems that concentrate wealth also destroy the planet. Green capitalism won't work because capitalism needs growth and nature has limits. Social ecology without critical theory is naive; critical theory without ecology is incomplete. Together, they diagnose the disease: domination of humans and nature together."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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