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The study of how the human brain, that three-pound blob of fatty tissue, is fundamentally bad at being objective. It posits that our thoughts aren't pure, logical computations, but are instead a swampy, murky bog of cognitive biases, inherited prejudices, and heuristics desperately trying to pass themselves off as rational thought. It's the science of proving that your brain is lying to you—constantly—about everything from your own abilities to the intentions of others. It's the humbling realization that "I think, therefore I am" should probably be amended to "I think I'm being rational, but I'm actually just confirming my own biases."
Example: "He was absolutely certain his memory of the event was perfect, a high-definition recording. His friend, a student of critical cognitive sciences theory, just smiled, knowing that memory is more like a bad artist's sketch, redrawn and reinterpreted every time it's pulled from the dusty filing cabinet of the mind."
by Dumu The Void February 14, 2026
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Critical Science

Science that explicitly incorporates critique into its practice—not just doing science, but constantly questioning its own assumptions, methods, and implications. Critical Science asks: who benefits? Who's excluded? What are we not seeing? How might our findings cause harm? It's science that has internalized its social responsibility, that knows knowledge is power and acts accordingly. Not science plus ethics as an afterthought, but science that builds ethical questioning into its very methodology.
"We could build this technology, but Critical Science asks: should we? Who will it harm? Who won't have access? What problems might it create? It's not stopping science—it's doing science with eyes open, knowing that 'can' doesn't imply 'should.'"
by Abzugal February 23, 2026
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Critical Sciences

An umbrella term for scientific fields that have developed explicit critical traditions examining their own assumptions, methods, and social implications. Critical psychology questions its normalizing function. Critical geography examines how space produces power. Critical neuroscience asks who benefits from brain research. These aren't separate fields but self-aware versions of existing disciplines—sciences that have taken the critical turn and incorporated reflexivity into their core practice.
"Mainstream economics assumes rational actors and efficient markets. Critical Economics asks: whose rationality? Whose efficiency? Who benefits from these assumptions? Critical Sciences are what happen when a discipline grows up and starts questioning its own premises."
by Abzugal February 23, 2026
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Critical Social Sciences

The application of critical theory to the study of society: examining how power, ideology, and social structures shape human life, and how knowledge about society can serve emancipatory interests. Critical Social Sciences don't just describe society—they critique it, revealing oppression, exposing ideology, and working toward transformation. Sociology, anthropology, political science, and economics, when done critically, become tools for understanding and changing unjust structures, not just documenting them.
"Your study describes inequality, but Critical Social Sciences ask: why does it exist? Who benefits? How could it be different? Description without critique is just photography of a car crash—interesting but useless to the victims."
by Abzugal February 23, 2026
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Critical Cognitive Sciences

The application of critical theory to the study of mind and brain: examining how cognitive science's assumptions, methods, and findings are shaped by cultural context, power relations, and social structures. Critical Cognitive Science asks: whose mind is being studied? Whose brain counts as "normal"? How do cognitive categories (intelligence, rationality, mental illness) serve social control? It's cognitive science forced to confront that minds don't exist in a vacuum—they're shaped by, and shape, the social world.
"Your study defines 'rationality' in Western terms and finds Western subjects more rational. Critical Cognitive Sciences asks: what if you defined rationality differently? What if your 'universal' mind is actually a specific cultural product? Your findings aren't wrong—they're just less universal than you think."
by Abzugal February 23, 2026
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Critical Ethology

The application of critical theory to the study of animal behavior—examining how assumptions about nature, instinct, and hierarchy in ethology reflect human social structures and power relations. Critical Ethology asks: Are animal behavior studies projecting human social norms onto animals? Do concepts like "dominance hierarchies" naturalize human inequality? How does the choice of which animals to study and which behaviors to emphasize reflect cultural biases? Critical Ethology doesn't reject ethology; it insists that studying animals is also studying ourselves, and that we should be aware of what we're projecting. It's ethology with the mirror held up to the observer.
Critical Ethology "They studied wolf packs and found 'alpha males'—then used that to justify human hierarchy. Critical Ethology asks: did they find nature, or did they find what they were looking for? Later research showed wolf packs are families, not dominance contests. The science reflected the society, not the other way around. Critical Ethology keeps us honest about what we're projecting onto animals."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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Critical Sociobiology

A critical examination of sociobiology—the study of the biological basis of social behavior—that questions its assumptions, methods, and political implications. Critical Sociobiology asks: Does sociobiology naturalize existing social arrangements? Does it overstate genetic determinism? How does it handle the nature-nurture interaction? Whose interests are served by claims that inequality, patriarchy, or competition are "biological"? Critical Sociobiology doesn't deny biological influences on behavior; it insists that claims about biology must be scrutinized for their social and political context, and that biology is always interacting with culture, not determining it.
Critical Sociobiology "They claimed rape is biologically programmed—therefore natural. Critical Sociobiology asks: whose interests does that serve? What evidence supports it? What alternative explanations are ignored? Biology isn't destiny, and using it to justify harm is ideology, not science. Critical Sociobiology examines the politics behind the biology."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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