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socks-and-sandals material

A playful way to suggest someone might not be considered suitable or desirable for a romantic relationship. Implying someone whose style or behaviour might not be considered desirable in a romantic context.
Ew, not Mike, he's such a socks-and-sandals material.
Your smile is genuinely enchanting, it's just too bad I'm such a socks-and-sandals material.
by eghuro January 14, 2024
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A twist on classic materialism: it argues that while physical reality exists, what counts as a "resource," "infrastructure," or "poverty" is defined by human ideas and social systems. Oil was just sticky goo until we constructed ideas of energy and engines. A "food desert" isn't a natural phenomenon; it's a material condition constructed by zoning laws, economic racism, and transportation policy. The physical world is filtered and shaped by our conceptual and political constructions.
Example: "Two neighborhoods have the same sunlight. One has roofs covered in solar panels, constructed as an 'energy resource.' The other has bare roofs, constructed as a 'cost burden' by landlords. The Theory of Constructed Material Conditions shows the physical sun is the same; the material condition of 'energy poverty' is built by human decisions, economics, and law, not by nature."
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
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The analysis that the economic, technological, and physical resources available to a society—its "material conditions"—are not globally uniform, but are powerfully shaped by regional geography, climate, indigenous species, and historical path dependency. This theory argues you can't understand a region's politics, culture, or conflicts without first understanding what its land can grow, what its mountains hide, and what its rivers can carry. Fate is written in topsoil and ore deposits.
Example: The Theory of Regionalism of Material Conditions explains why the steppe regions of Eurasia, suited to horse pastoralism but not dense agriculture, repeatedly produced nomadic cavalry empires that clashed with the settled, grain-based imperial bureaucracies of China and Europe. The grass literally shaped global history.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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A more granular version of regionalism, focusing on how hyper-local variations in material conditions—a single valley's microclimate, a specific hill's defensibility, a unique local mineral spring—create radically different societal outcomes even within the same broader region. It emphasizes that history is made not on continents, but in parishes, neighborhoods, and watersheds.
Theory of Locality of Material Conditions Example: In medieval Europe, a village built on a rocky hill with a freshwater spring (local material conditions) could become an independent, fortified town. A village a few miles away on a fertile floodplain might become a wealthy but vulnerable estate of a feudal lord. Their divergent political fates were dictated by a few meters of elevation and access to water.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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A framework revealing how we ignore the material basis of outcomes—the economic, physical, and biological realities that shape possibilities. Fooled by Material Conditions Theory shows how we attribute success to merit, failure to fault, while ignoring the material conditions that make merit possible or impossible. The rich are not smarter; they had material advantages. The sick are not weak; they face material obstacles. We are fooled when we see only individuals and their choices, missing the material world that constrains and enables.
Fooled by Material Conditions Theory "He pulled himself up by his bootstraps, they say—ignoring that he had boots. Fooled by Material Conditions: celebrating individual effort while ignoring the material base that made effort possible. The bootstrap story is true, but only for those who have boots. Material conditions fool us into thinking everyone starts equal."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
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caged plutonium which is a transuranic material that has a half-life of 24,065 years, making it decay (into different elements) inside a zinc-aluminum hull (the aluminum delicates due to the radiation and thus might crumble depending on the weight of plutonium-239) but doesn't rust as easily due to the zinc coating
"Our team have created a simulation of the half-life decay of plutonium-239 in a zinc-aluminum material lined caging scenario."
by outrageously long vocabulary November 26, 2024
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