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The view that "globalization"—the dense interconnection of economies, cultures, and politics—is not an inevitable, natural force like the weather, but a political project built by specific policies. Trade agreements, container shipping standards, international financial regulations, and telecom treaties are the deliberate architectural plans. The "global village" feels like a reality, but it is a constructed infrastructure that could be built differently, or dismantled.
Example: "Your phone, with parts from 12 countries, feels like proof of 'natural' globalization. The Theory of Constructed Globalization points to the blueprint: the 1990s WTO agreements that slashed tariffs, the ISO shipping container specs, and the U.S. Navy's protection of sea lanes. This connectivity isn't gravity; it's a carefully engineered system. Calling it 'inevitable' just hides the power of the engineers."
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
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The argument that the narrative of the "Industrial Revolution" as a sudden, inevitable, and monolithic turning point is itself a historical construction. It lumps together disparate, localized technological changes (in textiles, steam, iron) into a single, epic story of "Progress" to serve national myths and ideological narratives (like the triumph of capitalism). This construction obscures the alternatives, the brutal costs, and the fact that it wasn't a "revolution" to those living through its decades of messy, uneven change.
*Example: "Textbooks present the Industrial Revolution as a neat before-and-after: farms to factories. The Theory of Constructed Industrial Revolution says that story was built later by historians and boosters to explain the rise of British power. For a spinner in Manchester in 1790, it wasn't a 'revolution'; it was a confusing, brutal shift in daily grind. The sweeping narrative constructs a destiny from what was, in the moment, a chaotic, contested, and far from inevitable mess."*
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
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Theory of Constructed Norm

The sociological concept that what a society considers standard, acceptable behavior is not a natural or inevitable discovery, but is actively built, maintained, and enforced by that society's institutions, power structures, and cultural narratives. Norms are not found; they are made. This theory examines the process of norm entrepreneurship—how media, laws, education, and peer pressure collaborate to design a blueprint for "how to be," punishing deviation and rewarding conformity until the constructed feels innate.
Theory of Constructed Norm *Example: The mid-20th century Constructed Norm of the heterosexual, male-breadwinner nuclear family as the only "healthy" model was built through tax policy, Hollywood films, suburban design, and psychology textbooks pathologizing other arrangements. This wasn't human nature; it was a post-war social project that became so powerful it felt like gravity.*
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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Theory of Constructed Normal

A psychological and phenomenological offshoot focusing on the internal, subjective sense of what feels "normal" to an individual. This theory posits that our personal baseline for experience is constructed through a continuous feedback loop between our biology, our personal history of rewards/punishments, and the cultural norms we absorb. "Normal" is the brain's efficient, learned model of the world, which can become maladaptive when it constructs a baseline of chronic stress, inequality, or alienation as just "the way things are."
Theory of Constructed Normal Example: For someone raised in a high-conflict household, constant anxiety might feel Constructed Normal. Their nervous system calibrated to that environment, making peacefulness feel eerie and unfamiliar. This isn't a moral failure; it's a learned internal model that can be deliberately deconstructed and rebuilt through therapy or new experiences.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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The grand, systemic synthesis of the Constructed Norm and Constructed Normal. It is the analysis of how entire lifeways—complete with their associated emotions, identities, and economic structures—are manufactured and sustained as the default, unremarkable backdrop of reality. It asks how capitalism, for instance, constructs not just markets, but a "normal" life of wage labor, consumer desire, and specific gender roles that feel like the only possible reality.
Theory of Constructed Normality *Example: The Constructed Normality of the 21st-century "always-on" digital life, where constant connectivity, performance of self on social media, and gig economy precarity are accepted as standard, was built by tech platforms, venture capital, and shifting workplace culture. It's a total lived environment that feels inevitable, but was architected.*
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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The theory that logic is not discovered but constructed—built by communities, shaped by cultures, developed through history, contingent rather than necessary. Logical Constructions argues that what counts as logical varies across time and place, that different societies develop different reasoning norms, that even the laws of logic are human products. This doesn't mean logic is arbitrary; it means logic is a tool, not a revelation—a human creation for human purposes. The Theory of Logical Constructions explains why different cultures reason differently, why logical systems change over time, why what seems self-evident in one context seems strange in another. Logic is constructed, not found—and constructed things can be reconstructed.
Theory of Logical Constructions Example: "He'd always thought logic was universal—the same for everyone, everywhere, always. Then he encountered the Theory of Logical Constructions and learned that different cultures had developed different logics, that even the law of non-contradiction wasn't universal, that logic was a human product like any other. His certainty wavered; his curiosity grew. Logic wasn't less real; it was differently real—made, not found."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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The theory that science is not a pure reflection of reality but a construction—built by communities, shaped by interests, developed through history, contingent rather than necessary. Scientific Constructions argues that scientific facts are not simply discovered but produced, that scientific methods are not timeless but historical, that scientific knowledge bears the marks of its makers. This doesn't mean science is false; it means science is human—fallible, situated, shaped by the conditions of its production. The Theory of Scientific Constructions explains why science changes, why different cultures develop different sciences, why scientific knowledge is always provisional. Science is constructed, not revealed—and constructed things can be improved.
Theory of Scientific Constructions Example: "She'd been taught that science was pure discovery—nature revealing itself to patient observers. The Theory of Scientific Constructions showed her otherwise: science was made, not found—shaped by funding, by institutions, by culture, by power. The knowledge was real, but so was the process that produced it. Science wasn't less true; it was differently true—human truth, not divine."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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