The study of how human societies organize, fund, and react to space exploration, from the Cold War space race (we'll go to the moon because they're going to the moon) to the modern era of private spaceflight (billionaires racing to see who can build the coolest rocket). It examines why nations spend billions on space when problems exist on Earth (prestige, mostly, plus the off chance of finding aliens), how space agencies manage public perception (carefully staged photos, heroic narratives), and what happens to astronaut marriages (usually divorce, space is not kind to relationships).
Spaceflight Social Sciences Example: "A spaceflight social sciences study examined why public interest in space spikes during launches and crashes during the years of preparation in between. The conclusion: humans have short attention spans and space is mostly waiting. The study recommended more explosions, as those get views. NASA declined to comment but did schedule more test flights."
by Abzugal February 14, 2026
Get the Spaceflight Social Sciences mug.The study of how human societies imagine, fund, and react to the cosmos, from ancient star-worshippers to modern Mars-colony dreamers. It examines why we project our hopes and fears onto the heavens (aliens will save us / aliens will eat us), how space discoveries reshape culture (the Earthrise photo changed everything), and why billionaires are so obsessed with space (it's the ultimate gated community). Space social sciences reveal that the cosmos is a mirror, reflecting not what's out there, but what we bring to it.
Example: "A space social sciences study analyzed why Mars colonization captures the imagination while ocean exploration doesn't. The conclusion: space feels like the future; the ocean feels like the past. Also, Mars doesn't have sharks, which is a significant advantage in the public perception department."
by Abzugal February 14, 2026
Get the Space Social Sciences mug.The study of how human societies understand, represent, and are shaped by concepts of space and time, from ancient calendars to modern time zones to the weird feeling that time speeds up as you age. It examines why different cultures have different relationships with punctuality (some see time as a line, others as a circle, others as a suggestion), how space and time structure social life (work here, live there, do it now, not later), and what happens when our technologies collapse spacetime (instant global communication means you can be harassed by your boss from anywhere, at any time—thanks, progress).
Example: "A spacetime social sciences study examined why meetings always run long. The conclusion: humans have a poor intuitive grasp of time, compounded by optimism (we can do five things in an hour), social pressure (no one wants to be the first to leave), and the fact that the person who scheduled the meeting didn't account for the spacetime curvature caused by their own ego, which bends time around them so they always have 'just one more thing.'"
by Abzugal February 14, 2026
Get the Spacetime Social Sciences mug.The study of how human societies would organize themselves if everyone knew that all possible outcomes exist somewhere in the probability dimension. How do you build consensus when every decision branches into infinite alternatives? How do you punish crime when the criminal exists in branches where they didn't do it? And how do you manage relationships when you know there's a version of your partner who loves you, a version who tolerates you, and a version who has already moved to another dimension and started a new life with someone else? Spacetime-probability social sciences suggest that societies in such a reality would either achieve perfect peace (nothing matters, everything exists) or collapse into utter chaos (nothing matters, everything exists).
Spacetime-Probability Social Sciences Example: "A spacetime-probability social sciences study examined how couples would function if they could see all possible versions of their relationship. The researchers found that most couples, when shown a branch where they were happier, immediately became unhappy with their current branch. When shown a branch where they were miserable, they felt relieved—until they realized that version of them was also suffering. The study concluded that infinite knowledge is terrible for relationships and recommended blissful ignorance."
by Abzugal February 14, 2026
Get the Spacetime-Probability Social Sciences mug.The study of how large populations behave as social entities—not just as collections of individuals but as emergent phenomena with their own dynamics, moods, and logics. Social masses develop their own culture (memes, language, values), their own history (shared memories, founding myths), and their own psychology (collective emotions, shared traumas). Understanding social masses means understanding that the whole is different from the sum of its parts—that a crowd can be angry even if most individuals aren't, that a nation can be hopeful even if most citizens are anxious. The psychology of social masses is the foundation of politics, marketing, and any endeavor that involves moving large groups of people in roughly the same direction.
Example: "She studied the psychology of social masses to understand why her country had become so polarized. It wasn't just individuals with different opinions; it was two masses with different emotions, different memories, different truths. Each mass reinforced itself, excluded the other, and treated the other's existence as a threat. Understanding this didn't bridge the divide, but it explained why bridge-building was so hard."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
Get the Psychology of Social Masses mug.The study of how physically assembled groups behave in social contexts—protests, concerts, sporting events, religious gatherings. Social crowds have their own psychology: they're more emotional than individuals, more suggestible, more capable of collective action. They can also be more generous (crowds at benefits give more) and more dangerous (crowds at riots destroy more). The psychology of social crowds explains why people do things in groups they'd never do alone—the diffusion of responsibility, the intensification of emotion, the sense of anonymous power. It also explains why crowds can be so moving—the sense of belonging, of being part of something larger, of losing the self in something greater.
Psychology of Social Crowds Example: "At the concert, she felt the crowd psychology take over—singing along with thousands, arms in the air, completely present. She wasn't herself anymore; she was part of something larger. Later, alone, she couldn't recreate the feeling. That's crowd psychology: it only exists in the crowd, which is why people keep coming back."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
Get the Psychology of Social Crowds mug.The study of how individuals and groups are influenced, manipulated, or compelled to behave in socially desired ways—through laws, norms, incentives, threats, and the subtle architecture of choice. Social control isn't just about police and prisons; it's about everything that shapes behavior: advertising that makes you want things, education that makes you believe things, architecture that makes you move in certain ways, algorithms that make you click certain links. The psychology of social control reveals that most control is invisible—we think we're choosing freely when our choices have been engineered. Understanding it is the first step toward either resisting it or using it, depending on your ethics.
Example: "He studied the psychology of social control and couldn't unsee it—the way supermarkets placed essentials at the back (making you walk past everything), the way apps used variable rewards (keeping you hooked), the way news framed stories (shaping your opinions). He felt both empowered (he could see the manipulation) and powerless (seeing it didn't stop it from working)."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
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