"Yo brah, what did you do last night?"
"I was gonna write an essay but ended up just doing fomework"
"I was gonna write an essay but ended up just doing fomework"
by gsadjkjhfdkljdf November 17, 2009
Get the Fomework mug.noun - time or activity spent on Facebook or other social media, but presented as valuable time spent on productive, worthwhile effort, particularly for your job
verb - to spend time on or engage in activities on Facebook or other social media and represent that time as being well-invested on product work or activities, particularly for your job
verb - to spend time on or engage in activities on Facebook or other social media and represent that time as being well-invested on product work or activities, particularly for your job
I'd love to stay and chat, but I have facework to do.
Dang, my boss caught me faceworking and I got written up.
Dang, my boss caught me faceworking and I got written up.
by littlefrisco February 6, 2014
Get the facework mug.So Win asked Dot: "You didn't cum inside of her, right?" Dot replied: "Hell naw...I hit her with that facework!"
by TONYSTEELZ July 28, 2015
Get the Facework mug.The overarching structures of assumptions, methods, concepts, values, and practices that organize scientific inquiry within particular domains, eras, or communities. Scientific Frameworks are broader than paradigms—they include not just the theoretical commitments of a discipline but also its institutional arrangements, funding patterns, publication norms, and social relations. A framework determines what questions are worth asking, what methods are appropriate for answering them, what counts as evidence, what standards of proof are required, and what kinds of explanations are acceptable. Frameworks can span multiple paradigms—the Newtonian framework persisted through paradigm shifts within it; the Darwinian framework continues to evolve while maintaining core commitments. Understanding Scientific Frameworks is essential for grasping how science actually works: not as a pure logical enterprise but as a human institution shaped by history, culture, and power. Frameworks enable science by providing stability and shared understanding; they also constrain it by limiting what can be thought, asked, or seen.
Example: "He couldn't understand why his radical idea was rejected. Scientific Frameworks explained it: his proposal didn't fit the existing framework—it asked different questions, used different methods, assumed different values. It wasn't that his idea was wrong; it was that it was incommensurable with the framework that dominated his field. He had to either work within the framework or wait for a framework shift."
by Abzugal March 9, 2026
Get the Scientific Frameworks mug.Scientific frameworks understood as a form of ivory culture—the specific theoretical lenses, methodological commitments, and interpretive schemes that structure inquiry, but viewed as instruments of exclusion and control. Where paradigms are the broadest structures, frameworks are the specific tools: particular theories, particular methods, particular assumptions that define what counts as legitimate work in a field. Ivory frameworks are those that have become so dominant, so institutionalized, so protected by powerful communities that they function as gates rather than tools—admission to the community requires adopting them, and refusal means exclusion. The framework becomes ivory when it's no longer a tool for inquiry but a test of loyalty.
Ivory Frameworks Example: "The journal only published work using one particular method—not because other methods couldn't produce knowledge, but because the Ivory Framework had captured the field and made its own tools the only acceptable ones."
by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
Get the Ivory Frameworks mug.A meta-theoretical framework for understanding how scientific frameworks themselves operate, evolve, and interact. The Theory of Scientific Frameworks argues that frameworks are not neutral containers for scientific work but active shapers of what science can see and say. It examines how frameworks emerge (from combinations of theoretical insight, methodological innovation, institutional support, and social conditions), how they stabilize (through training, funding, publication, and reward systems), how they change (through crisis, anomaly, generational turnover, and external pressure), and how they interact (through competition, synthesis, or incommensurability). The theory draws on Kuhn's work on paradigms but extends it to include the social, institutional, and political dimensions that Kuhn acknowledged but didn't fully develop. It also incorporates insights from science studies, critical theory, and epistemology to provide a comprehensive account of how science is framed—and how those frames shape what we know. The Theory of Scientific Frameworks is the foundation for understanding science not as a pure pursuit of truth but as a human enterprise with all the complexity, contingency, and politics that entails.
Example: "She applied the Theory of Scientific Frameworks to understand why her interdisciplinary work kept being rejected. The theory showed her that she was trying to work between frameworks—each with its own assumptions, methods, and standards. No single framework could evaluate her work because it participated in multiple frameworks simultaneously. Understanding this didn't get her published, but it saved her from thinking the problem was her work rather than the frameworks themselves."
by Abzugal March 9, 2026
Get the Theory of Scientific Frameworks mug.The systematic study of how epistemological frameworks operate, how they shape knowledge, how they change over time, and how they relate to power and culture. The Theory of Epistemological Frameworks argues that knowledge is never framework-free—that all knowing happens within some structure of assumptions, standards, and practices. It examines how frameworks are established (through education, institutions, authority), how they're maintained (through peer review, gatekeeping, socialization), how they change (through paradigm shifts, revolutions, cultural contact), and how they're related to social power (whose frameworks dominate, whose are marginalized). The theory doesn't claim that all frameworks are equally valid; it claims that all knowledge is framework-dependent, and that understanding frameworks is essential for understanding knowledge itself.
Example: "He used to think knowledge was just knowledge—objective, universal, framework-free. The Theory of Epistemological Frameworks showed him otherwise: all knowledge comes from somewhere, all knowing happens within some structure. His framework wasn't reality; it was just his framework. Understanding that didn't make knowledge impossible; it made it more honest."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 9, 2026
Get the Theory of Epistemological Frameworks mug.