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Acacia Landing

An Ensationable community know for random celebrity appearances and full power of soul and spirit.
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ACARI

The determined effort to fight for and achieve what you want; striving to obtain your goals through any possible means.
“I move with ACARI — quitting was never an option.”

“ACARI is choosing discipline when motivation fades.”
by STRIVE ACARI January 26, 2026
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Academic Metaparadigm Theory

Similar to Meta-academic Paradigm Theory, but focused specifically on the paradigms that define entire academic disciplines from a higher level. It asks: What are the super-categories that organize knowledge? Is the fundamental divide between the sciences and the humanities? Or between theoretical and applied fields? This theory maps the architecture of the academy itself and how it channels intellectual inquiry.
Academic Metaparadigm Theory Example: The "Two Cultures" divide identified by C.P. Snow—between the scientific and literary intellectual cultures—is a classic Academic Metaparadigm. It explains why a physicist and a poet might have such different values, methods, and notions of truth, and why interdisciplinary work between them is so rare and difficult.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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Academic Paradigm Theory

The analysis of the overarching intellectual frameworks that govern entire disciplines within academia, dictating what questions are worth asking, what methods are legitimate, and what counts as a meaningful answer. It looks at how fields like sociology, history, or economics are defined by competing paradigms (e.g., structuralism vs. post-structuralism, cliometrics vs. narrative history). These paradigms are often invisible to those inside them, acting as the unquestioned water in which academic fish swim.
Academic Paradigm Theory Example: In economics, the Keynesian paradigm (focusing on government intervention to manage demand) and the Neoclassical paradigm (focusing on market efficiency and rational actors) represent two different Academic Paradigm Theories. A professor trained in one may literally not see the evidence prized by the other, leading to economists talking past each other as if from different intellectual universes.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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Academic Bias

The set of prejudices inherent to the institutional university system, including: over-valuing theoretical knowledge over practical wisdom, privileging complex jargon over clear communication, favoring citation networks over novel ideas from outsiders, and upholding disciplinary silos that prevent holistic understanding. It's the "ivory tower" mentality that can mistake academic consensus for absolute truth and peer review for divine revelation.
Example: A brilliant artisan with decades of practical experience in sustainable agriculture is denied a speaking slot at an environmental conference because they lack a PhD. This is Academic Bias—the institution valuing credentials over proven, on-the-ground knowledge, mistaking the map (the degree) for the territory (the expertise).
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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Academic Picking

The scholarly malpractice of selectively citing only the literature, methodologies, or data that support one's hypothesis or theoretical allegiance, while ignoring or dismissing significant contrary work. This creates an artificial consensus within a publication or field, making a position appear more robust and uncontested than it is. It's cherry-picking with footnotes, using the veneer of academic rigor to disguise intellectual dishonesty.
Academic Picking Example: A psychologist writing a paper on the benefits of a strict parenting style cites ten studies showing correlations with high achievement, but academically picks by omitting five major, peer-reviewed studies linking the same style to increased anxiety and depression in children. The resulting literature review presents a skewed, non-representative "state of the field."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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Academic Biases

The prejudices inherent to the university and research institution ecosystem. These include disciplinary bias (dismissing questions from outside your field), prestige bias (favoring work from elite institutions), citation cartels, and the tyranny of trendy theory. They govern what knowledge is produced, who gets to produce it, and what gets recognized as legitimate scholarship.
Academic Biases Example: A brilliant paper using unconventional methods is rejected from a top journal. One reviewer's comment reads: "This is not how research is done in this field." This is pure Academic Bias—enforcing methodological conformity not because it's wrong, but because it's unfamiliar, protecting the paradigm and its gatekeepers.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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