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Theory of Scientific Elites

Studies the social stratification within science, where a credentialed elite possesses the cultural capital, institutional access, and specialized language that separates them from both the public and from less-prestigious researchers. Their elite status grants their pronouncements automatic authority.
Theory of Scientific Elites Example: The IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) scientists. They constitute a scientific elite whose aggregated reports carry immense weight in global policy. While based on evidence, their elite status gives them unique power to define the crisis and its solutions, potentially marginalizing localized or indigenous knowledge systems in the process.
by Dumu The Void February 7, 2026
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The most pervasive form of control, where the scientific worldview becomes the dominant, "common sense" framework for understanding reality itself. It’s when scientific authority extends beyond the lab to shape culture, ethics, and politics, making alternative ways of knowing (e.g., spiritual, artistic, traditional) seem pre-modern or invalid.
Theory of Scientific Hegemony *Example: The mantra "Follow the Science!" during a public health crisis. While well-intentioned, it can establish a scientific hegemony where complex political trade-offs (liberty vs. security) or ethical choices are framed as purely technical problems with a single scientific solution. This sidelines democratic debate and frames dissent as "anti-science," consolidating authority in expert institutions.
by Dumu The Void February 7, 2026
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