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Field Sciences

The collective body of disciplines that emerge from the process of Field Science. These are the organized, institutionalized knowledge systems that now govern areas of life once ruled by tradition, art, or personal choice. They produce the experts, journals, and metrics that define normalcy within their claimed territory.
Field Sciences Example: "Nutritional Science," "Exercise Science," and "Happiness Science" (positive psychology). Together, these field sciences have turned the basic human acts of eating, moving, and feeling into highly technical domains requiring expert guidance. They generate constantly shifting, often contradictory commandments that pathologize intuitive living.
by Dumuabzu February 8, 2026
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Field Epistemology

The rules for what counts as valid knowledge within a specific, constructed domain of control. It establishes that only certain types of evidence (usually quantitative, empirical) and certain knowers (credentialed experts) can produce truth about the field. It actively excludes other ways of knowing, like personal testimony, tradition, or philosophical reasoning.
Field Epistemology Example: In corporate "People Analytics," a field epistemology is established where the only valid knowledge about employee morale comes from engagement survey metrics and productivity software data. A manager's personal observation or an employee's direct complaint is dismissed as "anecdotal" and therefore epistemologically invalid.
by Dumuabzu February 8, 2026
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Field Technologies

The tools, devices, and platforms engineered to operationalize control within a constructed field. These technologies make the field tangible, enforceable, and measurable. They are the physical and digital infrastructure that turns a theoretical scientific framework into a system of daily surveillance and behavioral modification.
Field Technologies Example: The "smart ring" that tracks sleep, stress, and activity. It’s a field technology for the field of "Quantified Self" science. It renders your biological and emotional states as data streams, enabling external benchmarks (corporate wellness programs) or your own anxiety to govern your behavior based on the field's prescriptions.
by Dumuabzu February 8, 2026
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Field Logic

The internal, often circular, reasoning system used to justify and maintain a field's boundaries and rules. It provides the "common sense" arguments that make the field's operations seem inevitable and neutral. Its axioms are rarely questioned from within, and it deflects criticism by labeling it as a failure to understand the field's unique necessities.
Example: In the field of "Predictive Policing," the field logic argues: "Crime data shows crime in Area X. Therefore, we must deploy more officers to Area X. The increased presence generates more arrests, producing more crime data for Area X, proving our initial logic correct." This circular logic justifies disproportionate policing while ignoring systemic bias in the initial data.
by Dumuabzu February 8, 2026
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Field Reason

The specific mode of calculated, instrumental thinking demanded by and rewarded within a controlled field. It is reason stripped of ethical, historical, or social context, focused solely on optimizing for the field's designated goals (e.g., efficiency, engagement, profit). To use Field Reason is to accept the field's premises and play by its rules.
Field Reason Example: A social media manager using field reason decides to post inflammatory content because the platform's algorithm rewards outrage with visibility. They are reasoning perfectly within the field's logic (maximize engagement metrics), while deliberately ignoring the broader social harm (polarization, spread of hate) their actions cause.
by Dumuabzu February 8, 2026
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Field Rationality

The performance of being a rational actor according to the narrowly defined standards of a specific field. It involves adopting the vocabulary, metrics, and goals of the field as one's own, and making decisions that are "rational" within that closed system, even if they are irrational or destructive from a wider human perspective.
Field Rationality Example: A student choosing to memorize factoids for a standardized test instead of deeply understanding the subject. This is field rationality: within the field of "educational testing," maximizing your score is the only rational goal. The richer, more meaningful—but less testable—learning is rationally abandoned.
by Dumuabzu February 8, 2026
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Field Dabbler

The antidote to the word "layman." A Field Dabbler is someone who realizes that being a "non-expert" in one specific academic subject doesn't make them "common." Instead, they are masters of their own life-path who "dabble" in other fields as peers. They don't just consume information; they translate it, finding the bridge between their own deep lived-expertise and someone else's specialized jargon.
Stop trying to 'dumb it down' for me in layman's terms. I’m a Field Dabbler—I’ve got a Ph.D. in my own craft, I’m just here to see how your data fits into my world
by CognitiveEqualist February 21, 2026
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