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I fucking LOVE this.
Hym "I ABSOLUTELY LOVE AI Pokémon National Geographic. I mean LOVE. It's great. There was one featuring the doodling Jigglypuff from the show and it gives the character a very satisfying pay off. Which I don't remember whether or not that was included IN the actual show but still. Very satisfying. The collisions and interactions between characters are getting better as well. I could probably figure out a way to expedite the process of it getting better as well because I know exactly what the problem is... Still. Fantastic. A great use of the AI. I approve."
by Hym Iam December 27, 2025
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wake up the members of my nation

you won't be free until you wake up her members of my nation..

the icarly theme song is called "leave it all to me" (a really good song)
tv: it's all real, I'm telling you just how i feel
friend: bro are you watching a kid's show?
friend 2: it's a good show!
tv: wake up the members of my nation-
by NIGHT_BR3AKS August 30, 2022
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The theory that science is fundamentally shaped by political and economic forces—that what gets studied, how it's studied, who gets to study it, and what counts as knowledge are all influenced by power and money. The theory argues that science is not an ivory tower but a field of struggle, where research agendas reflect funding priorities, where methods reflect available resources, where conclusions reflect institutional interests. This doesn't mean science is false; it means science is human, situated, shaped by the conditions of its production. The Theory of the Political and Economic Nature of Science explains why some questions get answered and others ignored, why some researchers thrive and others struggle, why science is never pure.
Theory of the Political and Economic Nature of Science Example: "She'd dreamed of a pure science, untouched by politics or money. The Theory of the Political and Economic Nature of Science showed her otherwise: every grant was a choice, every publication a negotiation, every finding shaped by who paid for it. Science wasn't corrupt; it was just real—shaped by the same forces that shape everything else. The purity she'd imagined had never existed."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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The theory that reality itself—what we take to be real, true, given—is shaped by political and economic forces. The theory argues that reality is not simply discovered but constructed, that what counts as real depends on who has the power to define reality. This isn't idealism; it's realism about power. The Theory of the Political and Economic Nature of Reality explains why certain truths are recognized and others suppressed, why some experiences are validated and others dismissed, why reality is never neutral. Those who control resources also control what counts as real—and what counts as real shapes what can be done.
Example: "He used to think reality was just... reality. Then he encountered the Theory of the Political and Economic Nature of Reality: who decides what's real? Who benefits from that definition? Who is erased by it? Reality wasn't given; it was made—by power, for power. He started seeing the construction everywhere, and couldn't unsee it."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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The theory that efficiency is fundamentally shaped by political and economic forces—that what counts as efficient, who gets to define it, and whose interests it serves are determined by power and money. The Theory of the Political and Economic Nature of Efficiency argues that efficiency is not a technical concept but a political one, not a neutral measure but an economic weapon. It shows how efficiency definitions serve ruling classes, how they justify exploitation, how they exclude alternatives. The theory is the foundation of critical efficiency studies, of the recognition that efficiency is never just efficiency.
Theory of the Political and Economic Nature of Efficiency Example: "He'd thought efficiency was just about doing things better—technical, neutral, good. The Theory of the Political and Economic Nature of Efficiency showed him otherwise: efficiency was a weapon. It was used to justify layoffs, to cut services, to externalize costs. The 'efficient' solution was usually the one that benefited those already in power. He stopped celebrating efficiency and started asking who was paying for it."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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A framework for evaluating naturalness along eight key dimensions. The 8 axes are: 1) Biological Origin (whether it comes from living things), 2) Human Intervention (how much humans modified it), 3) Evolutionary History (whether it has evolutionary precedent), 4) Cultural Construction (how much it's shaped by culture), 5) Scientific Explanation (how well science explains it), 6) Historical Continuity (whether it has historical precedent), 7) Cross-Cultural Presence (whether it appears across cultures), and 8) Essentialist Belief (whether people think it's essential). These axes allow for nuanced evaluation of naturalness.
The 8 Axes of the Natural Spectrum Example: "They debated whether organic food was 'more natural.' The 8 axes showed: biological origin (yes), human intervention (less than conventional, but still present), evolutionary history (plants evolved, farming didn't), cultural construction (the whole category is constructed). The axes explained why the debate never ended—'natural' meant different things on different axes."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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An expanded framework adding eight dimensions for more nuanced naturalness evaluation. The additional axes include: 9) Indigenous Knowledge (how it's categorized in different knowledge systems), 10) Religious Classification (whether it's seen as God-given), 11) Legal Status (how law treats it), 12) Economic Value (how it's valued in markets), 13) Aesthetic Judgment (whether it's seen as beautiful), 14) Moral Loading (whether it's seen as good or bad), 15) Purity Discourse (whether it's seen as pure), and 16) Nostalgia Connection (whether it's linked to idealized past). The 16 axes provide comprehensive naturalness analysis.
The 16 Axes of the Natural Spectrum Example: "The GMO debate was mapped on all 16 axes: high on human intervention, low on evolutionary history, contested on moral loading, high on economic value, mixed on religious classification. The axes showed why people talked past each other—they were on different axes, using 'natural' to mean different things."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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