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Sub-Human 

An individual so delusional they stop becoming human. This is an umbrella term for people who make decisions that are cruel or cause more harm to others out of their own selfishness. Often loaded with their own financial, or racial or cultural bias. Turning blind eyes to an obvious reality.
The verdict was made by a sub-human judge out of their own greed to put more money in their pocket.
Sub-Human by Aknownmouse September 8, 2025
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hentai human

Calling someone a sexual object/symbol without appreciating their humanity

Ex: this guy I was play in a video games is my hentai human, because they super skinny asian and he is very kawaii
Ex: this guy I was play in a video games is my hentai human, because they super skinny asian and he is very kawaii
hentai human by eclipze0o0 September 29, 2025

The human play-dough

A horrific and vile sexual act where a person sits on their partners face and defacates (shits) into the mouth of the person who is the human play-dough machine. The aim is to release enough excrement that it fills the person's mouth and eventually comes out their ears. (This is similar to how play-dough could be pushed into machines and it would come out of other holes due to the pressure)

Tip: For better results the one defacating should eat taco bell to cause diarrhea, the consistency should be runny but still firm, similar to play-dough
Chris: I did the human play-dough on my boyfriends face last night, you should try it
The human play-dough by Wiseman486 December 16, 2025

Sigma human

A human who is a sigma alpha and is apart of the GC ¨A sigma Alpha Chat¨ And have A LOT of HUZZ😕
This guy is a sigma human

Mechanical Human Sciences

A mechanistic paradigm for understanding individual human beings, viewing the person as a biological machine whose components (genes, neurotransmitters, cognitive modules) can be isolated, studied, and repaired independently. It is the philosophy behind much of biomedicine and behavioral psychology: identify the broken part, fix or replace it, restore normal function. This approach has achieved astonishing successes (antibiotics, joint replacements) but struggles with conditions where the "machine" metaphor breaks down.
Mechanical Human Sciences Example: Testosterone replacement therapy for low libido is Mechanical Human Science. The logic is straightforward: identify a deficient hormone, supplement it, restore function. This works beautifully when the system is truly a simple input-output machine. It fails when the "deficiency" is caused by stress, relationship conflict, or depression—states that are not mechanical failures but adaptive responses the machine metaphor cannot comprehend.

Complex Human Sciences

The study of individual humans as complex adaptive systems in their own right, characterized by non-linear development, multi-causality, and sensitive dependence on initial conditions. It rejects simple medical models (one gene → one disease; one trauma → one disorder) in favor of viewing a person as an integrated network of biological, psychological, and social subsystems, all interacting. Health and illness, in this view, are emergent states of the whole person-system.
Complex Human Sciences Example: Depression is not, Complex Human Science insists, simply a "chemical imbalance" that a pill can correct. It is an emergent state of a complex system: genetic vulnerabilities, childhood attachment patterns, current life stressors, sleep quality, nutrition, inflammation, and meaning-making narratives. Two individuals with identical serotonin levels may have radically different mood states because their systems are configured differently. Treatment must address the system, not just the lab value.

Dynamic Human Sciences

The study of individual human beings as changing, developing, and adaptive systems over time. It rejects snapshot models of personality or ability, focusing instead on trajectories: how a child's language capacity reorganizes itself at critical periods, how an athlete's skill degrades with age and rebounds with training, how trauma reshapes neural architecture. Dynamic Human Sciences view a person not as a fixed entity, but as a process.
Dynamic Human Sciences *Example: Longitudinal studies of cognitive decline in aging are the domain of Dynamic Human Science. Researchers don't just compare 70-year-olds to 30-year-olds; they follow the same individuals for decades, measuring how processing speed, memory, and executive function wax and wane with health, lifestyle, and intervention. The person is not a data point; they are a trajectory.*