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Digital Human Sciences

An interdisciplinary field applying humanities perspectives to digital technologies and their human implications. Digital Human Sciences ask: What does it mean to be human in an age of algorithms? How do digital technologies shape identity, creativity, and meaning? What ethical frameworks do we need for AI, VR, and ubiquitous computing? Drawing on philosophy, ethics, media studies, and cultural theory, it prepares us for the human questions of a digital age.
"She asked not whether AI could be conscious, but what it would mean for us if it were. That's Digital Human Sciences: the human questions of digital technology. Not just what technology can do, but what it does to us—and what we become as we use it."
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Scientific Human Theory of Collective Dissociation

An interdisciplinary approach to understanding collective dissociation that integrates scientific methods with humanistic perspectives—drawing on history, literature, philosophy, and the arts alongside social science. The scientific human theory of collective dissociation recognizes that dissociation involves not just measurable behaviors but meaning, narrative, identity, and value—dimensions that require humanistic as well as scientific understanding. It uses historical analysis to trace how dissociative narratives develop; literary criticism to understand how stories encode and enforce dissociation; philosophical inquiry to examine the ethical implications of collective denial; artistic expression to access dimensions of experience that quantitative methods miss. This approach treats collective dissociation as a human phenomenon in the fullest sense—something that demands both scientific rigor and humanistic depth, both explanation and interpretation, both data and meaning.
Example: "Her scientific human theory of collective dissociation combined statistical analysis of historical denial with close reading of the novels and poems that encoded that denial in cultural memory. The numbers showed the pattern; the literature showed what it felt like to live inside it."

Scientific Human Theory of Mass Dissociation

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."

Digital Human Sciences

The intersection of digital methods with humanities inquiry: digital archives, computational text analysis, digital storytelling, and critical platform studies. It uses computational tools to ask humanistic questions—about meaning, interpretation, history, culture—while remaining attentive to the limitations of algorithmic analysis. Digital human sciences also critically examine the human impact of digital technologies, including algorithmic bias, digital labor, and the cultural politics of data.
Example: “Her digital human sciences project used text mining on centuries of colonial correspondence to visualize how bureaucratic language shaped the administrative imaginary of empire, blending computational scale with interpretive depth.”

The Human Bong

When you stick a bag of kush inside someone’s butthole, light it up and stick a pvc pipe inside the person ass, and take a long inhale
“Hey dude I broke my bong. You don’t mind I can do The Human Bong on you?”

“Sure man go right ahead.”

“Thanks bro”

The Human Experience

Term that envelops the set of hyper-niche, relatable circumstances that are extremely specific yet super relatable.
"Yo, is it just me, or does it feel cursed when your mom gives your phone back and it feels 30% smaller and strangely cold?"
"Bro, stop. I thought I was a freak for noticing that. It’s like the phone went to another dimension for five minutes."

"Exactly. It’s just part of the human experience."

Thoreauvian Human Sciences

A humanities‑inflected approach inspired by Thoreau, applying his methods of close observation, journal‑keeping, and reflective essay writing to the study of human experience. It values subjective accounts, literary expression, and the integration of thinking and doing. Thoreauvian human sciences might include environmental humanities, life‑writing, and critical theory that refuses to separate the knower from the known. It resists the fragmentation of knowledge into specialised silos, preferring the holistic, essayistic mode Thoreau mastered.
Example: “His book blended natural history, autobiography, and political critique—Thoreauvian human sciences, refusing disciplinary boundaries to capture a life lived deliberately.”