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by Maternal-Fetal-Medicine February 11, 2025
Get the Video Editing And Phychiatry Turn You Into A Scientist After Choking. mug.The Mr. O'Brien Science Brainrot is a subculture, religion, manuscript, and "disease", based on the life of Russell O'Brien. Due to his high-pitched voice, a voice recorded file of a Mr. Hanky soundin ahh fella went viral within New Zealand, bringing the group into popularity.
"William and Arman's conversion to the Mr. O'Brien Science Brainrot group changed my perspective."
"The legend of O'Brien's breakout of an ISIS facility through rat atom manipulation inspired me to convert to the Mr. O'Brien Science Brainrot"
"The legend of O'Brien's breakout of an ISIS facility through rat atom manipulation inspired me to convert to the Mr. O'Brien Science Brainrot"
by Bigwillyoftingletribe April 24, 2025
Get the Mr. O'Brien Science Brainrot mug.Related Words
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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
Get the Theory of the Political and Economic Nature of Science mug.A broader, often First World political version of the previous fallacy, where one dismisses scientific findings, theoretical frameworks, and even well‑established social science by appealing to an idealized “real life.” This rhetoric typically surfaces in debates about climate policy, public health, education, or social welfare: “Real life isn’t a textbook,” “People in the real world don’t care about theory,” “Real life is more complex than your models.” The fallacy is that it positions the speaker as a hard‑nosed pragmatist while using “real life” as a rhetorical shield to ignore evidence that challenges their preferred policies. It’s a favorite of politicians and pundits who want to appear grounded while rejecting expertise that inconveniences them.
“I Work with Real Life, not Science nor Theory” Example: “When confronted with studies on housing affordability, the candidate said ‘I work with real life, not science nor theory’—dismissing decades of urban research to justify developer‑friendly zoning.”
by Dumu The Void March 23, 2026
Get the “I Work with Real Life, not Science nor Theory” mug.Sue: My stomach is so sore.
Molly: How come?
Sue: I've got my maths, english, science
Molly: Oh that time again.
Molly: How come?
Sue: I've got my maths, english, science
Molly: Oh that time again.
by Rhiannon-May September 11, 2006
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