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An interdisciplinary approach to mass dissociation that integrates scientific methods with humanistic perspectives—recognizing that mass dissociation involves meaning, culture, narrative, and value that require humanistic as well as scientific understanding. The scientific human theory of mass dissociation uses historical analysis to trace how mass denial has operated across civilizations; literary study to understand the stories that encode and enable dissociation; philosophical inquiry to examine the ethics of knowing and not knowing; artistic expression to access dimensions of experience that data cannot capture. It treats mass dissociation as a phenomenon that demands both explanation and interpretation, both measurement and meaning, both science and wisdom.
Example: "His scientific human theory of mass dissociation combined statistical analysis of climate denial with close reading of the novels and films that helped people feel okay about it. The numbers showed what was happening; the art showed how it felt to live through it—and how to feel nothing at all."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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A framework applying cognitive science to understand the mental processes underlying mass dissociation at population scale. The scientific cognitive theory of mass dissociation investigates how individual cognitive mechanisms (attention, memory, belief updating, cognitive dissonance reduction) interact with social and technological systems to produce widespread denial. It asks: How do cognitive biases scale up through social networks? How does human information processing handle threats too large to comprehend? What cognitive mechanisms enable populations to maintain contradictory beliefs? How do cognitive processes interact with media environments to shape what masses can know? This approach reveals that mass dissociation is rooted in the basic architecture of human cognition—amplified by social context, triggered by overwhelming threats, and shaped by the information environments we've created.
Example: "Her scientific cognitive theory of mass dissociation research showed that the human brain simply isn't designed to process threats on the scale of climate change—we evolved to respond to immediate dangers, not gradual planetary transformation. Mass dissociation isn't just denial; it's cognitive mismatch."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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A theoretical framework examining how digital technologies and online environments enable, amplify, and transform mass dissociation at global scale. The theory of digital mass dissociation investigates how algorithms create personalized reality bubbles that insulate billions from uncomfortable truths; how platforms optimize for engagement over accuracy, creating economies of attention that reward denial; how digital architectures enable coordinated disinformation campaigns that manufacture dissociation; how social media dynamics create collective realities disconnected from physical truth. It also examines how digital environments enable new forms of mass dissociation: global denial networks; algorithmic reality management; virtual worlds that replace physical awareness; digital amnesia as inconvenient information disappears. This theory reveals that the digital age hasn't just changed dissociation—it has created unprecedented capacities for entire populations to disconnect from reality while appearing more connected than ever.
Example: "His theory of digital mass dissociation showed how TikTok's algorithm created billions of personalized reality tunnels—each user living in a world carefully crafted to avoid anything disturbing, while thinking they were more informed than ever. Mass dissociation had become automated, personalized, and infinitely scalable."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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A theoretical framework examining how entire populations under late-stage capitalism enter dissociative states—collectively disconnecting from the systemic realities that would otherwise demand response. Mass dissociation under late-stage capitalism operates at societal scale: whole nations dissociate from the violence that sustains their consumption; entire generations dissociate from the future they're foreclosing; global populations dissociate from the suffering embedded in every product. The theory explains how mass denial functions not as individual failing but as systemic feature—the economy requires dissociation to continue; the political system rewards it; the culture normalizes it. Mass dissociation enables business as usual while the planet burns, while inequality spirals, while democracy hollows out. It's not that people don't know—they know and don't know, in a mass dissociation that protects the system from the response its reality would otherwise provoke.
Example: "The polls show people know climate change is real and urgent—yet behavior doesn't change. Theory of Mass Dissociation of Late-Stage Capitalism explains the gap: mass dissociation allows knowing without acting, awareness without response, information without integration."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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A sociological framework examining how mass dissociation operates at population scale under late-stage capitalism—the large-scale social processes that enable entire societies to disconnect from systemic reality. This theory investigates how institutions (media, education, government, corporations) work together to produce mass dissociation: news that reports disasters without context; entertainment that provides escape from awareness; advertising that reframes consumption as identity; politics that offers spectacle instead of substance; work that consumes energy needed for reflection. It examines how mass dissociation becomes embedded in everyday life—in the rhythm of days, the structure of spaces, the flow of information, the possibilities for attention. The theory reveals that mass dissociation under late-stage capitalism is not a failure of the system but one of its essential features—a social achievement that requires constant maintenance through countless institutions and practices.
Example: "His social theory of mass dissociation of late-stage capitalism showed how the built environment itself enforces dissociation—windowless shopping malls, highway systems that hide neighborhoods, suburbs designed for isolation. The dissociation isn't just in our heads; it's in our streets."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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A systematic, empirically-grounded framework for studying mass dissociation at population scale under late-stage capitalism. The social scientific theory applies large-scale quantitative methods (national surveys tracking denial and awareness; time-use studies measuring attention to systemic issues; content analysis of media across decades), comparative historical analysis (how mass dissociation operated in different eras of capitalism), institutional ethnography (how organizations produce and maintain dissociation), and network analysis (how dissociative frames spread through populations). It treats mass dissociation as a population-level phenomenon with identifiable causes, mechanisms, and effects—something that can be studied with the same rigor applied to other large-scale social processes. This approach seeks to understand not just that mass dissociation happens, but how it happens, why it varies across contexts, and what might interrupt it.
Example: "His social scientific theory of mass dissociation of late-stage capitalism used big data analysis of social media to track how climate information spreads—showing that algorithmic amplification creates 'dissociation cascades' where awareness peaks then rapidly dissipates. The pattern wasn't individual; it was structural, built into the information environment."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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An interdisciplinary framework integrating humanistic perspectives with empirical research to understand mass dissociation at population scale under late-stage capitalism. The human scientific theory uses historical analysis to trace how mass dissociation has operated across capitalist eras; cultural studies to understand how media, art, and entertainment shape collective awareness; philosophical inquiry to examine the ethical implications of mass denial; literary analysis to understand the narratives that enable populations to live with contradiction. It treats mass dissociation as a phenomenon that requires both scientific rigor and humanistic depth—both measurement of patterns and interpretation of meanings, both explanation of mechanisms and understanding of experiences. This approach recognizes that mass dissociation under late-stage capitalism is not just a social fact but a human drama—something that happens to people, through people, and for reasons that include meaning, value, and identity as much as structure and incentive.
Example: "His human scientific theory of mass dissociation of late-stage capitalism showed how the stories we tell about success—the self-made individual, the meritocratic dream—make it possible to ignore the structural reality of inequality. The dissociation isn't just structural; it's narrative, embedded in the stories we live by."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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