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anthro-dna testing

What all non extraterrestrials and/or non animals and/or all non robots, ie all humans, regardless of your or your parent's immigration status, born in the us must undergo at birth
Forget regular DNA testing. You need anthro-dna testing to determine if you're an alien (extraterrestrial in ancient Greek) or you're a ufir
by Sexydimma March 19, 2026
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A branch of anthropology that examines the scientific method as a cultural practice—studying scientific communities as cultures with their own rituals, beliefs, norms, and practices around method. The anthropology of the scientific method uses ethnographic methods to investigate how scientists actually do science: how they learn methods through apprenticeship, how they decide which methods are appropriate, how they interpret results, how they resolve methodological disputes, how they teach method to newcomers, and how method functions as a marker of community identity. It reveals that the scientific method is not just a set of rules but a living cultural practice—embedded in particular communities, transmitted through particular relationships, and shaped by particular histories. Understanding method anthropologically means understanding it as a human activity, not just an abstract procedure.
Anthropology of the Scientific Method Example: "Her anthropology of the scientific method research involved two years embedded in a physics lab, watching how postdocs actually learned to design experiments. The official method said one thing; the cultural practice said another. The real method was what the community did, not what the textbooks said."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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Anthropology of Science

A subfield of anthropology that studies scientific communities as cultures—examining their social structures, belief systems, rituals, and material practices. It treats science as a human endeavor, not a transcendent method, and uses ethnographic methods to understand how scientists actually work, how knowledge is produced in labs, and how scientific authority is constructed. The anthropology of science reveals that science is as much about social negotiation, career incentives, and cultural assumptions as it is about empirical evidence. It demystifies the “science” as a monolithic entity by showing the rich, messy human activity behind it.
Example: “The anthropology of science classic, Laboratory Life, showed that even in a biochemistry lab, ‘facts’ were built through argument, reputation, and negotiated agreement—not simply discovered.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 23, 2026
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Anthropology of Atheism

An ethnographic and comparative study of atheism as a cultural phenomenon. It examines how atheism is practiced, expressed, and understood in different societies—ranging from state‑sponsored atheism in socialist countries to marginalized atheist groups in deeply religious societies. It uses fieldwork to understand how people live atheism, how they navigate family and community pressures, and how they construct meaning without traditional religion.
Example: “Her anthropology of atheism fieldwork in a small Midwestern town revealed that local atheists formed a ‘Sunday Assembly’ with music, speakers, and potlucks—a secular liturgy that mirrored the church culture they’d left.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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Anthropology of Skepticism

The ethnographic and cross‑cultural study of skepticism as a lived practice—how communities cultivate doubt, how they distinguish legitimate inquiry from dangerous disbelief, and how skepticism is embedded in rituals, language, and social roles. Anthropologists of skepticism examine skeptical communities (e.g., “skeptic” organizations, online skeptic forums) as cultural groups with their own totems (peer‑review, scientific consensus), initiation rituals (conferences, podcasts), and boundary‑policing mechanisms (labeling opponents “pseudoskeptics”). They also explore how skepticism varies across cultures: what counts as “healthy doubt” in one society may be seen as destructive heresy in another.
Example: “Her anthropology of skepticism fieldwork at a skeptical conference revealed that attendees performed ritual acts of debunking—like a collective reaffirmation of identity—even when the targets were already widely discredited.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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Anthropology of Logic

The ethnographic and comparative study of logical systems as cultural artifacts—how communities formalize reasoning, how they handle contradictions, and how logical norms are transmitted. Anthropologists of logic explore how non‑Western cultures have developed sophisticated logical traditions (e.g., Buddhist logic, Arabic logic) that differ from classical Western frameworks, and how these traditions are marginalized or appropriated. They also examine how logic is taught, how logical fallacies are weaponized, and how “logic” becomes a marker of cultural identity.
Example: “His anthropology of logic work documented how Tibetan monastic debate uses a logic that tolerates provisional contradictions—not as errors, but as steps toward deeper insight—challenging the Western assumption that consistency is the highest virtue.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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A subfield that uses ethnographic methods to understand how the scientific method is actually practiced in laboratories, field sites, and research communities. It studies how scientists are trained in methodological norms, how methods are negotiated during collaborative work, and how the “method” is invoked to legitimize certain findings while dismissing others. Anthropologists show that the scientific method is not a fixed recipe but a flexible, socially reproduced practice that varies across disciplines and institutions.
Example: “Her anthropology of the scientific method fieldwork in a molecular biology lab revealed that the official ‘hypothesis‑driven’ method was often backfilled after serendipitous discoveries—the narrative of method came after the fact, serving a social function of justifying the work.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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