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Shot from the Spectrum

A blunt, accurate and usually offensive assessment of a person or situation, delivered by someone who is clearly on the spectrum and oblivious to social cues.
Dan - 'I think my shirt has shrunk a little'.
Ash - 'Nah, clearly you're just fat'.
Jarrad - 'Well that was a shot from the spectrum!'
by Zoltan Technician July 23, 2025
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The sub spectrum

1. n. The spectrum below or beneath the autism spectrum.
2. n. Foolish or socially inappropriate behavior.
Did you see Rick at my cousin's wedding?

Yeah, he was eating the flowers out of the center pieces.

That was totally on the sub spectrum. What's wrong with that guy?
by picc285 May 2, 2019
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On the color spectrum

A phrase used to describe a boy who is a faggot to such an extent that he becomes incapable of growing into an adult, and will forever act like a toddler.

Signs of these people are evident when things like "People keep telling me to man up. Sometimes I don't wanna be a guy!" or "I'm such an emotionally sensitive person. I don't wanna be a man!" are spoken.
I always thought Billy was a faggot, but I think he's actually on the color spectrum.
by IMGONNACOOOOOOM January 17, 2021
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A foundational model for understanding scientific practice along two fundamental dimensions. The first axis runs from Pure Science (knowledge for its own sake, curiosity-driven research, fundamental understanding) to Applied Science (knowledge for practical use, problem-solving, technology development). The second axis runs from Hard Sciences (physics, chemistry, with precise measurement and controlled experiments) to Soft Sciences (sociology, psychology, with complex systems and interpretive challenges). These two axes create four quadrants: hard-pure (theoretical physics), hard-applied (engineering), soft-pure (theoretical sociology), soft-applied (clinical psychology). The model reveals that "science" isn't one thing—it's a spectrum of practices with different goals, methods, and standards.
"You keep judging sociology by physics standards. The 2 Axes of the Science Spectrum show why that fails: they're in different quadrants. Hard-pure has different goals than soft-applied. Different axes, different standards. Learn the spectrum or stay confused about why psychology doesn't look like chemistry."
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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An expanded model adding two crucial dimensions to the basic framework. Axis 1: Pure-Applied (knowledge for understanding vs. knowledge for use). Axis 2: Hard-Soft (precise measurement vs. complex interpretation). Axis 3: Consensus-Stable vs. Consensus-Emerging (fields with established paradigms vs. fields still in formation). Axis 4: Value-Laden vs. Value-Neutral (sciences that explicitly engage values vs. those that aim for value-freedom). These four axes create a sixteen-type space that captures far more nuance than simple binaries. Physics sits at hard, pure, stable, relatively neutral. Medicine sits at applied, mixed hardness, stable, deeply value-laden. Sociology sits at soft, mixed pure-applied, emerging, deeply value-laden. The 4 Axes reveal that methodological debates often stem from different positions on these spectra.
The 4 Axes of the Science Spectrum "Your critique of social science assumes it should be on the same axes as physics. The 4 Axes show: different coordinates entirely. Social science is softer, more applied, less paradigmatically stable, more value-laden. That's not failure—it's a different location on the spectrum. Map before you judge."
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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A comprehensive model adding two further dimensions for deeper analysis. Axis 1: Pure-Applied (understanding vs. use). Axis 2: Hard-Soft (precision vs. interpretation). Axis 3: Consensus-Stable vs. Emerging (paradigm solidity). Axis 4: Value-Laden vs. Neutral (explicit value engagement). Axis 5: Reductionist-Holistic (explaining by parts vs. understanding wholes). Axis 6: Quantitative-Qualitative (number-based vs. meaning-based methods). These six axes generate sixty-four possible science-types, capturing the full complexity of scientific practice. Particle physics is reductionist, quantitative, hard, pure, stable, relatively neutral. Ecology is more holistic, mixed methods, softer, applied, emerging, value-laden. Neuroscience spans multiple positions depending on subfield. The 6 Axes reveal that "science" is a family resemblance concept, not a single method.
The 6 Axes of the Science Spectrum "You keep saying real science must be quantitative and reductionist. The 6 Axes show that's just one corner of science-space. Ecology is holistic and mixed-methods and still science. Anthropology is qualitative and interpretive and still science. Your narrow definition doesn't describe science—it describes your preference within it."
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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