Skip to main content
The systematic elaboration of scientific privilege as a framework for understanding the politics of knowledge. The Theory of Scientific Privilege argues that science is not a neutral pursuit of truth but a field of power—that certain scientific methods, institutions, and knowledge systems are privileged, others marginalized, and that this privilege reflects social hierarchies, not epistemic superiority. It traces how Western science became dominant, how it was used to justify exploitation and exclusion, how other knowledge systems were suppressed. It doesn't reject science; it calls for examining its privilege and opening space for other ways of knowing. The Theory of Scientific Privilege is the foundation of epistemic decolonization.
Example: "She'd believed science was simply the best way to know things—objective, universal, true. The Theory of Scientific Privilege showed her otherwise: science had a politics, a history, a relationship to power. Western science was privileged because of empire, not because it was better. She started learning from other knowledge systems, other ways of knowing, other truths."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Scientific Privilege mug.
The theory, associated with Thomas Kuhn, that science progresses not through steady accumulation of knowledge but through paradigm shifts—fundamental changes in the frameworks within which science operates. A paradigm is a whole worldview: assumptions, methods, standards, exemplars. Normal science works within a paradigm; revolutionary science breaks it. The Theory of Scientific Paradigms explains why science is not simply cumulative, why old theories are not simply absorbed into new ones, why scientific change is often resisted and traumatic. It's the theory that science is human, historical, and revolutionary—not a smooth march to truth but a series of ruptures.
Example: "He'd thought science just added knowledge over time, like building a wall brick by brick. The Theory of Scientific Paradigms showed him otherwise: science was more like a series of earthquakes—old structures collapsed, new ones rose, and the landscape was permanently changed. The bricks didn't just accumulate; they were reshuffled, remade, sometimes discarded."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Scientific Paradigms mug.

Law of Scientific Paradigms

The principle that science operates within paradigms—that scientific knowledge is always knowledge-within-a-framework, that paradigms shape what questions are asked, what methods are used, what counts as evidence. The Law of Scientific Paradigms, derived from Kuhn's work, argues that science is not a simple accumulation of facts but a series of paradigm-governed activities. Normal science works within a paradigm; revolutionary science breaks it. Paradigms are incommensurable—they can't be directly compared because they define the world differently. The law doesn't say science is irrational; it says science is historical, and that understanding science means understanding its paradigms.
Example: "He'd thought science just discovered facts, one after another. The Law of Scientific Paradigms showed him otherwise: facts were always facts-within-a-paradigm. When paradigms shifted, facts shifted too. What was true in Newton's paradigm wasn't false in Einstein's—it was differently true. Science wasn't a straight line; it was a series of leaps."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
mugGet the Law of Scientific Paradigms mug.
The principle that certain scientific positions are granted unearned authority—privileged not because they're better supported but because they're associated with dominant institutions, funders, or research traditions. The Law of Privileged Scientific Position argues that some research gets funded, published, and cited by default; other research struggles for recognition. This privilege shapes what counts as science, what questions get asked, what answers are accepted. The law calls for examining why certain positions are privileged, who benefits, and what's excluded. It's the foundation of scientific humility, of the recognition that your position's privilege may have nothing to do with its truth.
Example: "Her research, done in community with marginalized populations, was ignored. His research, funded by corporations, was celebrated. The Law of Privileged Scientific Position explained why: his position was privileged, associated with power, with funding, with prestige. Hers wasn't. The difference wasn't evidence; it was privilege. She kept working, hoping that someday privilege would matter less."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
mugGet the Law of Privileged Scientific Position mug.
The systematic elaboration of privileged scientific position as a framework for understanding the politics of knowledge production. The Theory of Privileged Scientific Position argues that scientific authority is not distributed equally—that certain research programs, institutions, and traditions are privileged by their association with dominant power structures. It traces how this privilege operates, how it shapes research agendas, how it excludes alternative knowledge systems. It doesn't claim that privileged science is always wrong; it claims that its privilege should be examined, not assumed. The theory is the foundation of epistemic justice, of the recognition that a fair evaluation of knowledge requires examining not just evidence but the conditions under which it's produced.
Example: "She'd thought science was a meritocracy—best ideas win. The Theory of Privileged Scientific Position showed her otherwise: some ideas started ahead, some started behind. Funding, publication, prestige—all shaped by privilege. She stopped assuming her field's consensus was right because it was consensus and started asking whose interests it served."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Privileged Scientific Position mug.
A specific proposition within the broader theory of privileged scientific position: that once a scientific position is established as privileged, it tends to reproduce its privilege by defining the terms of what counts as science. The theorem argues that privilege is self-reinforcing: the privileged position sets the standards for funding, publication, and recognition, ensuring that it always appears superior. This is not conspiracy but structure—the rules of science are set by those who already dominate. The Theorem of Privileged Scientific Position explains why marginalized research struggles for recognition, why alternative knowledge systems are dismissed as unscientific.
Example: "Her community's knowledge was dismissed as 'anecdotal,' 'unscientific,' 'not real research.' The Theorem of Privileged Scientific Position explained why: the standards of science were set by institutions that excluded her community. Her knowledge wasn't measured by fair standards; it was measured by standards designed to exclude. She stopped seeking validation and started building her own."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
mugGet the Theorem of Privileged Scientific Position mug.
The chaotic, messy, and uncontrollable factors from the real world that invade a controlled experiment and ruin its beautiful, clean data. They are everything the researchers didn't think of, couldn't control for, or actively ignored to make their study publishable. If a lab study shows that people in a quiet room perform better on puzzles, the External Variables are the screaming kids, the pounding hangover, and the constant phone notifications of real life. They are the reason why a drug that works in 100% of carefully selected mice only works in 30% of chaotic, genetically diverse, cheeseburger-eating humans.
External Variables (Scientific Research) "That study saying productivity apps change your life controlled for every Internal Variable. But they didn't account for the External Variables: your battery dying, your boss adding more work, and your cat walking across the keyboard. The lab is a lie; the External Variables are always waiting outside the door."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 22, 2026
mugGet the External Variables (Scientific Research) mug.

Share this definition

Sign in to vote

We'll email you a link to sign in instantly.

Or

Check your email

We sent a link to

Open your email