A focused branch of the sociology of science that investigates the "scientific method" itself as a social construct and a set of evolving norms. It looks at how the idea of what counts as "good science" changes over time and varies between disciplines. Who decided that double-blind studies are the gold standard? Why did certain methods become marginalized? It treats the rulebook of science as a living document written by a specific community, not a holy text handed down from on high.
Example: "The psychology field's 'replication crisis' is a perfect case study for the sociology of the scientific method, showing how its own cherished rules for 'proof' sometimes fail."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the Sociology of the Scientific Method mug.The use of artificial intelligence and machine learning as powerful new tools for social science research. This includes using large language models to analyze centuries of text, employing computer vision to study non-verbal behavior in archived footage, or building agent-based models to simulate the spread of ideas or diseases through populations. It's the computational revolution coming for sociology and anthropology, offering the ability to find patterns in data too vast for any human researcher to process.
Example: "He used to spend years interviewing people; now with AI applied to social sciences, he just feeds millions of Reddit comments into an algorithm and calls it a day."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
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The integration of artificial intelligence into the humanities disciplines like history, philosophy, literature, and art criticism. AI tools can now reconstruct damaged historical texts, analyze stylistic patterns across a corpus of literature to identify influences, or generate philosophical arguments for critique. It's both a blessing and a crisis for the humanities: a powerful new method of inquiry that also challenges the very definition of human creativity and interpretation.
Example: "The Shakespeare scholar used AI to prove the authorship question once and for all—a perfect example of AI applied to human sciences, and the English department hasn't forgiven him for it."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the AI Applied to Human Sciences mug.The use of artificial intelligence as a tool to model, test, and understand the human mind. By building computational models that perform cognitive tasks—recognizing faces, making decisions, learning languages—researchers can create and test theories about how our own cognition might work. If an AI model behaves like a human under certain conditions, it might suggest that the human brain is using a similar computational strategy. It's cognitive science's most powerful laboratory.
Example: "They weren't sure how children learn grammar until they used AI applied to cognitive sciences to build a model that learned the same way, confirming their hypothesis."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the AI Applied to Cognitive Sciences mug.The use of artificial intelligence to automate and enhance the practice of data science itself. This includes using AI to automatically clean messy datasets, generate features, select the right models, tune hyperparameters, and even write the code for analysis. It's the field where AI becomes the data scientist's assistant, speeding up routine tasks and uncovering patterns that might take humans weeks to find. It's data science turning its tools back on itself.
AI Applied to Data Science Example: "He used to spend 80% of his time cleaning data; now with AI applied to data science, the machine does it for him, and he just focuses on asking the right questions."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the AI Applied to Data Science mug.The study of scientific communities using the tools and perspectives of cultural anthropology. It treats scientists not as pure reasoners but as members of a distinct culture with its own rituals, taboos, initiation rites, kinship systems, and oral traditions. The anthropologist of science might study how lab meetings function as tribal councils, how citation practices serve as gift exchange systems, how conference presentations operate as prestige competitions, and how "revolutionary" discoveries are actually negotiated through complex social processes. It reveals that the white coat is a cultural costume, the lab is a ritual space, and peer review is a sophisticated form of tribal gatekeeping. This approach doesn't deny that science produces truth—it just shows that truth-production is always also culture-production.
Example: "Her anthropology of science dissertation examined how theoretical physicists use hand gestures and whiteboard drawings as a form of ritual communication—a tribal language unintelligible to outsiders but sacred to initiates."
by Abzugal March 11, 2026
Get the Anthropology of Science mug.A focused subfield examining how "the scientific method" itself varies across cultures, disciplines, and historical periods as a set of cultural practices. It asks not "what is the scientific method?" but "how do different groups of scientists perform what they call the scientific method?" The controlled experiment is a ritual in some fields, while in others, fieldwork is the sacred practice. The anthropology of the scientific method reveals that what counts as "doing good science" is learned through apprenticeship, enforced by community norms, and subject to the same cultural variation as any other human practice—even as scientists themselves believe they're following a universal, timeless procedure.
Example: "The anthropology of the scientific method shows that 'reproducibility' means completely different things in particle physics versus ecology—same words, different cultural practices."
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