The application of Critical Theory to the natural sciences—biology, chemistry, physics, and fields studying the natural world—examining how they're shaped by social forces and how they can serve domination or liberation. Critical Theory of Natural Sciences asks: How have natural sciences been used to justify racism, sexism, colonialism? How do funding and institutional power shape research agendas? Could natural sciences be practiced differently—more democratically, more ecologically, more justly? Drawing on feminist science studies, postcolonial science studies, and environmental justice, it insists that natural sciences are never just natural—they're social through and through.
"Science is science, they say. Critical Theory of Natural Sciences asks: whose science? Funded by whom? For what purposes? Biology justified eugenics; medicine experimented on enslaved people. Natural sciences have histories of harm. That doesn't make them wrong; it makes them human. Critical theory insists on remembering those histories—and building science that doesn't repeat them."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
Get the Critical Theory of Natural Sciences mug.The application of Critical Theory to the scientific method itself—examining how methods are shaped by social contexts, how they embed values, and how they might be transformed. Critical Theory of Scientific Method asks: Is there one scientific method or many? How do methods reflect cultural assumptions? Whose interests are served by certain methods? Could methods be more democratic, more inclusive, more reflexive? Drawing on philosophy of science, feminist epistemology, and decolonial thought, it insists that method is never neutral—it's always methodological, always political. Understanding method requires understanding its politics.
"They say follow the scientific method. Critical Theory of Scientific Method asks: which method? Whose method? Methods are developed in contexts, for purposes. The method that works in physics may not work in ecology; the method that works for the powerful may not work for the powerless. Critical theory insists on asking: what values are built into the method itself?"
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
Get the Critical Theory of Scientific Method mug.The application of Critical Theory to the concept of pseudoscience—examining how the boundary between science and pseudoscience is drawn, who draws it, and what interests it serves. Critical Theory of Pseudoscience asks: Who gets to decide what's pseudoscience? How has the label been used to dismiss legitimate knowledge (especially from marginalized groups)? What power relations shape the demarcation problem? It doesn't defend actual pseudoscience but insists that the boundary is never neutral—it's political. Understanding pseudoscience requires understanding the politics of labeling.
"They call it pseudoscience and move on. Critical Theory of Pseudoscience asks: says who? By what criteria? Who benefits from drawing the line here? The label has been used to dismiss indigenous knowledge, traditional medicine, women's ways of knowing. Critical theory doesn't defend fraud; it asks who gets to decide what counts as fraud—and what interests that serves."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
Get the Critical Theory of Pseudoscience mug.The application of Critical Theory to movements against pseudoscience—examining how anti-pseudoscience activism can itself be shaped by power, how it can sometimes become dogmatic, and how it might serve domination despite good intentions. Critical Theory of Anti-Pseudoscience asks: Does debunking ever become debunkism? Does skepticism ever become closed-minded? Whose voices are amplified in anti-pseudoscience movements, whose silenced? How might anti-pseudoscience activism avoid becoming a new orthodoxy? It doesn't defend pseudoscience but insists that critique must also be self-critical—including critique of critique.
"He debunks everything that doesn't fit his worldview. Critical Theory of Anti-Pseudoscience asks: when does skepticism become dogma? When does debunking become debunkism? The anti-pseudoscience movement can be just as closed-minded as what it critiques. Critical theory insists that critique must include self-critique—including questioning your own certainties."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
Get the Critical Theory of Anti-Pseudoscience mug.The application of Critical Theory to parascience—fields and phenomena that exist alongside conventional science, often dismissed or marginalized—examining how the boundary between science and parascience is drawn and what interests it serves. Critical Theory of Parascience asks: Why are some phenomena considered parascientific rather than scientific? Who decides? How might parascience include legitimate knowledge that doesn't fit current paradigms? It doesn't defend every parascientific claim but insists that the boundary is political, not natural. Understanding parascience requires understanding the politics of scientific boundaries.
"They dismiss meditation research as parascience. Critical Theory of Parascience asks: parascience by whose standards? What if the phenomena are real but don't fit current methods? The boundary between science and parascience shifts over time—what's parascience today may be science tomorrow. Critical theory insists on asking who draws the line, and whether it serves understanding or exclusion."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
Get the Critical Theory of Parascience mug.The application of Critical Theory to Kuhn's concept of scientific paradigms—examining how paradigms are shaped by power, how they exclude alternative views, and how paradigm shifts are political as well as scientific. Critical Theory of Scientific Paradigms asks: Who benefits from dominant paradigms? Whose work is marginalized? How do power relations influence which paradigms succeed? It draws on Kuhn but adds critical analysis of the social forces that shape scientific revolutions. Paradigms aren't just cognitive; they're social, institutional, political.
"Paradigm shifts happen, Kuhn said. Critical Theory of Scientific Paradigms asks: why these shifts? Who benefits? The shift from geocentrism to heliocentrism wasn't just science; it was politics—church power, state power, institutional power. Paradigms aren't just ideas; they're systems of authority. Critical theory insists on asking who holds power in the paradigm, and who's excluded."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
Get the Critical Theory of Scientific Paradigms mug.The application of Critical Theory to how science is communicated to publics—examining who gets to speak for science, whose voices are amplified, and how communication can serve domination or liberation. Critical Theory of Science Communication asks: Who are the experts quoted in media? Whose perspectives are missing? How do science communicators frame issues, and whose interests do those frames serve? Does science communication empower publics or just deliver messages from above? Drawing on science and technology studies, critical pedagogy, and media studies, it insists that science communication is never neutral—it's always political.
"They say 'trust the science' as if science were unanimous. Critical Theory of Science Communication asks: trust which scientists? Funded by whom? Speaking to whom? Science communication often hides disagreement, complexity, uncertainty. Critical theory insists on communication that informs, not just commands—that empowers publics to think, not just obey."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
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