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Critical Ecology

The application of critical theory to ecology—examining how ecological science is shaped by social, economic, and political contexts, and how ecological concepts can reinforce or challenge dominant power structures. Critical Ecology asks: How do economic systems shape environmental research? Do concepts like "carrying capacity" or "population control" blame the poor for environmental problems? How does ecology interact with colonialism, capitalism, and inequality? Critical Ecology doesn't reject ecological science; it insists that ecology is done in society, not outside it, and that understanding nature requires understanding the social relations that shape how we study it.
Critical Ecology "They blame population growth for climate change—ignoring that the richest 10% emit half the carbon. Critical Ecology asks: whose interests does that framing serve? Ecology isn't just science; it's politics. Critical Ecology studies how ecological knowledge is produced and whose problems it solves. Nature and society aren't separate; ecology that forgets that is incomplete."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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Critical Social Ecology

A framework combining social ecology's insight that ecological problems are rooted in social hierarchies with critical theory's analysis of power, ideology, and domination. Critical Social Ecology argues that environmental destruction cannot be understood apart from social domination—that the logic that exploits nature is the same logic that exploits humans. It examines how capitalism, patriarchy, racism, and colonialism shape environmental crises, and how ecological movements can either challenge or reproduce these hierarchies. Critical Social Ecology is both analytical (understanding root causes) and political (imagining alternatives).
Critical Social Ecology "You can't solve climate change without addressing inequality. Critical Social Ecology says: the same systems that concentrate wealth also destroy the planet. Green capitalism won't work because capitalism needs growth and nature has limits. Social ecology without critical theory is naive; critical theory without ecology is incomplete. Together, they diagnose the disease: domination of humans and nature together."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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Critical Social Psychology

The application of critical theory to social psychology—examining how the discipline's concepts, methods, and findings reflect and reinforce dominant social arrangements. Critical Social Psychology asks: Does social psychology naturalize individualism? How do experiments create artificial situations that miss real social life? Whose interests are served by focusing on individual attitudes rather than structural power? How does the discipline handle issues of race, class, gender? Critical Social Psychology doesn't reject social psychology; it insists that studying individuals in society requires understanding the society, not just the individuals.
Critical Social Psychology "They study prejudice as individual bias—ignoring systemic racism. Critical Social Psychology asks: what does that framing hide? Individual bias exists, but so do structures. Focusing only on attitudes lets systems off the hook. Critical Social Psychology insists on connecting the psychological to the political. Minds don't exist in a vacuum; neither should psychology."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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A critical examination of evolutionary psychology—questioning its assumptions about human nature, its methods for inferring ancestral environments, and its political implications. Critical Evolutionary Psychology asks: Are evolutionary stories just-so stories? Do they naturalize contemporary social arrangements by projecting them onto the past? How does evolutionary psychology handle cultural variation? Whose interests are served by claims that patriarchy, violence, or greed are "evolved"? Critical Evolutionary Psychology doesn't deny evolution; it insists that claims about our evolutionary past must be scrutinized for evidence, alternative explanations, and political context.
Critical Evolutionary Psychology "They claim women are naturally monogamous and men naturally promiscuous—therefore patriarchy is natural. Critical Evolutionary Psychology asks: what's the evidence? How much cultural variation is ignored? Could the same data support different stories? Evolution happened, but the stories we tell about it reflect our present, not just our past. Critical Evolutionary Psychology examines the politics behind the prehistory."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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Critical Anthropology

The application of critical theory to anthropology—examining the discipline's colonial history, its role in constructing ideas about "other" cultures, and its potential for challenging ethnocentrism and power. Critical Anthropology asks: How has anthropology served colonial projects? Who gets to study whom? How do anthropologists represent other cultures, and with what effects? Can anthropology be decolonized? Critical Anthropology doesn't reject the study of human diversity; it insists that anthropology must examine its own position, its own history, and its own complicity in the power structures it studies.
"Early anthropologists studied 'primitive' cultures to show Western superiority. Critical Anthropology asks: who defined 'primitive'? Who benefited from these definitions? Anthropology has a colonial past; ignoring it repeats it. Critical Anthropology doesn't abandon the study of others—it insists on studying ourselves studying others. Reflexivity isn't optional; it's essential."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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Critical Social Sciences

An umbrella term for social science approaches that explicitly incorporate critique of power, ideology, and social structures into their methodology. Critical Social Sciences don't just describe society—they analyze how society is organized, who benefits, and how change might be possible. They draw on Marx, Foucault, feminist theory, critical race theory, and other traditions to examine the relationships between knowledge, power, and social organization. Critical Social Sciences include critical sociology, critical political science, critical economics, and others—all united by the commitment to understanding society in order to transform it.
"Mainstream economics describes markets; critical economics asks who markets serve. That's Critical Social Sciences—not just describing, but critiquing. Not just understanding, but changing. Social science without critique is just documentation; critique without social science is just opinion. Together, they're tools for freedom."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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Critical Human Sciences

A broad framework applying critical theory to all disciplines studying human life—psychology, sociology, anthropology, history, linguistics, and more. Critical Human Sciences examine how these disciplines have been shaped by power, how they've sometimes served domination, and how they might serve liberation. They insist that studying humans requires understanding the social context of the study itself—that the observer is part of the observed, that knowledge is never neutral, and that the human sciences must be self-aware or risk becoming tools of control rather than understanding.
"Psychology was used to pathologize resistance; anthropology was used to justify colonialism. Critical Human Sciences asks: how can disciplines that have served power now serve freedom? Not by pretending the past didn't happen, but by learning from it. The human sciences study humans; critical human sciences study humans studying humans. Reflexivity is the price of honesty."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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