The theory that we see everything and understand reality through paradigms—frameworks of assumptions, concepts, values, and practices that shape what we can see and how we interpret it. The Theory of Social and Cognitive Paradigms argues that this applies to everything, including the scientific method itself, which operates within its own paradigms that change over time. There is no paradigm-free perception, no view from nowhere. What we take to be "just the facts" is always facts-as-seen-through-a-particular-paradigm. The theory explains paradigm shifts in science (Kuhn), cultural differences in perception, and the persistence of disagreement even among reasonable people. It's the foundation of humility about knowledge, the recognition that our way of seeing is one among many.
Example: "He used to think science was just accumulating facts. The Theory of Social and Cognitive Paradigms showed him otherwise: facts were always facts-within-a-paradigm. When paradigms shifted, facts shifted too. Science wasn't a straight line; it was a series of revolutions, each with its own way of seeing."
by Abzugal March 9, 2026
Get the Theory of Social and Cognitive Paradigms mug.The frameworks of assumptions, values, and practices that shape how societies organize themselves, how people relate to each other, how social reality is constructed. Social Paradigms include norms, institutions, power relations, and cultural categories—all the invisible structures that make social life possible. They're what we mean when we talk about "the way things are done"—which is always just one way among many, made to seem natural by its familiarity.
Example: "He thought his society's way of organizing gender was just natural. Social Paradigms showed him otherwise: it was one paradigm among many, constructed not given, contingent not necessary. Other societies did it differently; his could too."
by Abzugal March 9, 2026
Get the Social Paradigms mug.The specific object of study in sociometeorology. It refers to the prevailing "atmospheric" conditions of a social group at a given time. Are conditions "fair and clear" (general contentment and cooperation)? Is there "heavy social fog" (confusion and misinformation)? Is a "storm front" moving in (rising political tensions or conflict)? Social weather is the collective mood, the unspoken vibe, the general temperature of a community, treated as a natural phenomenon rather than the sum of individual choices.
Example: "I was going to ask for a raise, but the social weather in the office was thick with tension, so I decided to wait for a sunnier forecast."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the Social Weather mug.The long-term, average pattern of social weather in a given society or group. If social weather is today's forecast, social climate is the expected seasonal norm. It describes the underlying, persistent conditions that shape everyday life: the baseline level of trust in institutions, the typical political polarization, the standard cultural attitudes. A single protest is social weather; a decades-long tradition of civil disobedience is part of the social climate.
Example: "The current political chaos isn't just a bad storm; it's the new social climate. We've shifted into an era of permanent instability."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the Social Climate mug.The practice of using insights from sociology, anthropology, psychology, and political science to design, understand, and regulate artificial intelligence. It recognizes that AI systems are not neutral math problems but are embedded in human social contexts. This field asks: How will this algorithm affect community dynamics? What social biases is it learning? How does it change power structures? It's the antidote to the naive view that AI is just code, reminding us that every AI is also a social actor.
Example: "They built a great recommendation engine, but without social sciences applied to AI, they accidentally created filter bubbles that radicalized their users."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the Social Sciences Applied to AI mug.The use of artificial intelligence and machine learning as powerful new tools for social science research. This includes using large language models to analyze centuries of text, employing computer vision to study non-verbal behavior in archived footage, or building agent-based models to simulate the spread of ideas or diseases through populations. It's the computational revolution coming for sociology and anthropology, offering the ability to find patterns in data too vast for any human researcher to process.
Example: "He used to spend years interviewing people; now with AI applied to social sciences, he just feeds millions of Reddit comments into an algorithm and calls it a day."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the AI Applied to Social Sciences mug.The application of sociological methods and theories to understand science itself as a social phenomenon. This field examines how scientific communities form, how prestige and funding flow through them, how consensus emerges (or fails to), and how social factors influence what gets studied and what gets ignored. It's not judging whether science is "true" but asking: who gets to be a scientist? Which questions are asked? Whose voices are heard? It treats the lab as a tribe and the journal as a ritual space.
Example: "The social sciences of science reveal that the 'lone genius' myth is just that—a myth that obscures the messy, collaborative, socially embedded reality of how discovery actually happens."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
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