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The blanket assertion that any claim associated with parascience—fields like parapsychology, telepathy, astral projection, or spiritual experience—is automatically false. The fallacy lies in treating "outside mainstream science" as synonymous with "false." But parascience includes phenomena that may be real but not yet scientifically explained, experiences that are real as experiences even if their interpretation is debated, and claims that may eventually be incorporated into expanded scientific frameworks. The label "parascience" describes relationship to current scientific consensus, not truth value. Assuming it equals false is assuming current science is complete—which is itself unscientific.
Parascience Equals False Fallacy "I shared my experience of what felt like communication with a deceased family member. Response: 'That's parascience, so it's not real.' That's Parascience Equals False Fallacy. The experience was real to me; what it means is open to interpretation. Dismissing it because it doesn't fit current science is confusing the map for the territory. Science changes; experiences don't disappear just because they're not yet explained."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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The rhetorical move of accusing someone of being into "parascience" as a way of dismissing their experiences, beliefs, or claims without engagement. The accusation positions the target as credulous, unscientific, or mentally unstable. The fallacy lies in using the accusation itself as the argument—as if labeling something "parascience" does the work of refutation. It's a conversation-ender that allows the accuser to feel superior without having to engage the actual phenomena or experiences.
"I tried to explain my meditation experiences and the sense of connection I feel. Response: 'Oh, you're into all that parascience stuff.' That's Parascience Accusation Fallacy—using the label to dismiss, not engaging what I actually said. My experiences are real to me; calling them 'parascience' doesn't make them disappear. It just shows you're not interested in understanding."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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Parascience

Parascience refers to systems of inquiry that exist alongside established science but operate outside its formal methodologies, verification standards, or institutional frameworks. Unlike pseudoscience, parascience does not necessarily reject scientific reasoning; instead, it explores speculative, emerging, or currently untestable ideas such as higher dimensions, consciousness fields, or extraphysical phenomena. Parascience often serves as a conceptual testing ground where ideas are developed before becoming scientifically formalized—or dismissed. It occupies a gray zone between science, philosophy, and metaphysics, frequently criticized for lack of rigor but valued for imaginative hypothesis generation.
Parascience — Example

A group of researchers studies consciousness as a field-like phenomenon that interacts weakly with physical matter. Their models borrow from physics and neuroscience but lack direct experimental validation. While not accepted by mainstream science, the work is internally consistent and mathematically framed, placing it in parascience rather than pseudoscience.
by AbzuInExile January 24, 2026
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The application of Critical Theory to parascience—fields and phenomena that exist alongside conventional science, often dismissed or marginalized—examining how the boundary between science and parascience is drawn and what interests it serves. Critical Theory of Parascience asks: Why are some phenomena considered parascientific rather than scientific? Who decides? How might parascience include legitimate knowledge that doesn't fit current paradigms? It doesn't defend every parascientific claim but insists that the boundary is political, not natural. Understanding parascience requires understanding the politics of scientific boundaries.
"They dismiss meditation research as parascience. Critical Theory of Parascience asks: parascience by whose standards? What if the phenomena are real but don't fit current methods? The boundary between science and parascience shifts over time—what's parascience today may be science tomorrow. Critical theory insists on asking who draws the line, and whether it serves understanding or exclusion."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
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A foundational model for understanding parascience—fields of inquiry that exist alongside conventional science without necessarily opposing it—along two fundamental dimensions. The first axis runs from Empirically Testable (claims that could potentially be investigated through observation and experiment) to Empirically Untestable (claims that currently resist scientific investigation due to methodology limits or phenomenon nature). The second axis runs from Mainstream-Compatible (findings could potentially integrate with conventional science) to Mainstream-Incompatible (findings would require fundamental revision of scientific paradigms). These two axes create four parascience categories: testable-compatible (fringe physics, some parapsychology research), testable-incompatible (phenomena that would break known physics if confirmed), untestable-compatible (philosophical questions, some spiritual experiences), untestable-incompatible (realms claimed to be beyond any possible investigation). The model reveals that parascience isn't a single thing—it's a diverse landscape of claims with different relationships to scientific method and scientific orthodoxy.
The 2 Axes of the Parascience Spectrum "You lump all parascience together as 'woo.' The 2 Axes show otherwise: telepathy research is testable but incompatible (would break physics). Meditation experiences are untestable but compatible (they don't contradict science). Different axes, different statuses. Not all parascience is the same kind of not-science."
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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An expanded model adding two crucial dimensions for finer discrimination. Axis 1: Testable-Untestable (can we investigate this?). Axis 2: Compatible-Incompatible (would it fit current science?). Axis 3: Experiential-Experimental (known through personal experience vs. potentially replicable in lab). Axis 4: Subjective-Objective (exists only for experiencer vs. potentially intersubjective). These four axes create sixteen parascience positions. Near-death experiences are untestable (can't replicate dying), incompatible (consciousness without brain? that's a revolution), experiential (known through personal reports), subjective (each experience unique). Telepathy research is testable, incompatible, experimental, potentially objective. The 4 Axes reveal that parascience debates often confuse these dimensions—dismissing subjective experiences as if they should meet experimental standards.
The 4 Axes of the Parascience Spectrum "You say NDEs aren't real because they can't be replicated in a lab. The 4 Axes show category error: NDEs are on the experiential, subjective end of the spectrum. Applying experimental, objective standards is like judging poetry by grammar rules. Wrong tool for the domain."
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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A comprehensive model adding dimensions of explanation and tradition. Axis 1: Testable-Untestable. Axis 2: Compatible-Incompatible. Axis 3: Experiential-Experimental. Axis 4: Subjective-Objective. Axis 5: Explained-Mysterious (could be explained by known mechanisms vs. genuinely mysterious). Axis 6: Traditional-Novel (ancient wisdom vs. recent claims). These six axes generate sixty-four parascience positions. Homeopathy is testable, incompatible (with pharmacology), experimental, objective (would work for anyone if real), explained (dilution can't work), novel (historically, not ancient). Meditation experiences are untestable, compatible, experiential, subjective, explained (neuroscience explains some), traditional. The 6 Axes reveal that parascience is a multidimensional space where ancient traditions and modern claims occupy very different coordinates.
The 6 Axes of the Parascience Spectrum "You think all parascience is equally valid or invalid. The 6 Axes show otherwise: meditation has tradition, compatibility, explanation on its side—it's on the compatible end. Homeopathy has none of that—it's testable and fails, incompatible with known science, explained in the 'doesn't work' sense. Same parascience label, completely different positions."
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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