A broader term encompassing all humanities and human-centered disciplines (philosophy, history, linguistics, arts) brought to bear on the development and deployment of artificial intelligence. It goes beyond fixing bias to ask fundamental questions: What does it mean to be human in an age of intelligent machines? How do we preserve dignity, creativity, and meaning? It's the practice of ensuring that as we build smarter machines, we don't build dumber or lesser humans in the process.
Example: "The ethics board was useless until they brought in a philosopher for human sciences applied to AI—he asked questions about personhood that the engineers had never even considered."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the Human Sciences Applied to AI mug.A broader, more humanistic approach to understanding science that draws on history, philosophy, literature, and the arts alongside social science methods. It asks not just how science works socially, but what it means—how it shapes our self-understanding, how it appears in culture, how it feels to be a scientist, how it changes what it means to be human. It's science studies with soul, concerned with the existential and cultural dimensions of the scientific enterprise.
Example: "Her book wasn't just history of physics; it was human sciences of science—exploring how relativity changed not just navigation, but poetry, philosophy, and our sense of place in the cosmos."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the Human Sciences of Science mug.Related Words
Humam
• humama
• Humamajilla
• humaman
• humammal
• Humammalammadingnohomodong
• humammus
• Human
• human suitcase
• human centipede
The study of the scientific method using the full toolkit of the humanities: historical analysis of how it developed, philosophical examination of its assumptions, literary analysis of how it's described and narrated, artistic representations of the scientist at work. It seeks to understand the method not just as a procedure but as a human activity—one with a history, a psychology, a cultural meaning, and profound implications for how we understand ourselves.
Example: "The course on human sciences of scientific method spent a week just on Faraday's notebooks—not for the physics, but for what they reveal about the human process of discovery."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the Human Sciences of Scientific Method mug.The philosophical and historical study of how human beings have understood "knowing" across cultures and eras, enriched by insights from psychology, anthropology, and cognitive science. It asks: What did it feel like to know something in ancient Greece versus medieval Europe versus the digital age? How do our brains actually do the work of knowing? What role do emotion, embodiment, and culture play in shaping our sense of certainty? It's epistemology made human.
Example: "The human sciences of epistemology remind us that 'knowing' isn't just a logical state—it's a felt experience, shaped by our bodies, our histories, and our communities."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the Human Sciences of Epistemology mug.The interdisciplinary study of logic as a human phenomenon—how we actually reason (as opposed to how ideal logic says we should), how logical skills develop, how logical systems emerge from human practices, and how logic functions in art, rhetoric, and everyday life. It draws on cognitive psychology, neuroscience, anthropology, and philosophy to understand logic not as a platonic ideal but as a living human capability, with all the messiness, creativity, and limitation that entails.
Example: "The human sciences of logic explain why people are so bad at the Wason selection task—our brains evolved for social reasoning, not abstract logical puzzles."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the Human Sciences of Logic mug.The application of human sciences—history, philosophy, literature, arts, and humanities disciplines—to the study of scientific orthodoxy. The human sciences of scientific orthodoxy examine the human dimensions of consensus: the historical development of orthodox views, the philosophical assumptions embedded in them, the cultural meanings they carry, the ethical implications of challenging or defending them, the narratives and metaphors that shape how orthodoxy is understood and communicated. They treat scientific orthodoxy not just as a cognitive or social phenomenon but as a human one—embedded in history, culture, meaning, and value. The human sciences of scientific orthodoxy reveal that consensus is never just agreement about facts; it's always also agreement embedded in human stories, human meanings, and human choices.
Example: "Her human sciences of scientific orthodoxy research traced the metaphors that shaped a particular consensus—showing how the way scientists talked about their object of study influenced what they could see and what they couldn't. The science was real, but the language shaped the seeing."
by Abzugal March 16, 2026
Get the Human Sciences of Scientific Orthodoxy mug.The branch of infrascience that examines the infrastructure underlying the human sciences—history, philosophy, literature, arts, and humanities disciplines. Human infrasciences investigate the foundational systems, structures, and conditions that make humanistic inquiry possible: archival infrastructure (libraries, museums, databases) that preserves human records; interpretive infrastructure (languages, concepts, theories) that enables understanding; institutional infrastructure (universities, humanities centers, scholarly societies) that supports humanistic work; technological infrastructure (digitization, text analysis tools, preservation technologies) that extends humanistic capabilities; and social infrastructure (communities of interpretation, peer networks, public engagement) that creates the contexts within which humanistic knowledge is produced and shared. Human infrasciences reveal that the humanities are never just about interpretation—they're always built on infrastructure, and understanding the humanities requires understanding the systems that make them possible.
Example: "His human infrasciences research showed how the digitization of archives has transformed historical scholarship—not by changing how historians think, but by changing what they can access. New infrastructure enables new questions, new methods, new knowledge."
by Abzugal March 16, 2026
Get the Human Infrasciences mug.