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A framework for evaluating extraordinariness along eight key dimensions. The 8 axes are: 1) Rarity (how uncommon the phenomenon is), 2) Impact (how much effect it has), 3) Unexpectedness (how surprising it is), 4) Historical Significance (whether it changes history), 5) Explanatory Challenge (how hard it is to explain), 6) Awe Potential (how much wonder it evokes), 7) Narrative Fit (how well it fits existing stories), and 8) Cultural Resonance (how much it resonates culturally). These axes allow for nuanced evaluation of extraordinariness.
The 8 Axes of the Extraordinary Spectrum Example: "The event was extraordinary—but how? The 8 axes showed: high on rarity, high on impact, high on unexpectedness, low on explanatory challenge (we understood it), medium on awe. The axes captured what made it extraordinary without losing precision."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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An expanded framework adding eight dimensions for more nuanced extraordinariness evaluation. The additional axes include: 9) Personal Significance (how it affects individuals), 10) Collective Memory (whether it will be remembered), 11) Symbolic Power (what it symbolizes), 12) Media Attention (how much coverage it gets), 13) Scientific Interest (how much scientists study it), 14) Mythic Potential (whether it becomes myth), 15) Temporal Reach (how long its effects last), and 16) Transformative Power (whether it changes things). The 16 axes provide comprehensive extraordinariness analysis.
The 16 Axes of the Extraordinary Spectrum Example: "The pandemic was mapped on all 16 axes: off the charts on most—impact, unexpectedness, historical significance, media attention, transformative power. But on explanatory challenge, it was moderate (viruses are understood). The axes showed exactly what made it extraordinary—and what didn't."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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A framework for evaluating naturalness along eight key dimensions. The 8 axes are: 1) Biological Origin (whether it comes from living things), 2) Human Intervention (how much humans modified it), 3) Evolutionary History (whether it has evolutionary precedent), 4) Cultural Construction (how much it's shaped by culture), 5) Scientific Explanation (how well science explains it), 6) Historical Continuity (whether it has historical precedent), 7) Cross-Cultural Presence (whether it appears across cultures), and 8) Essentialist Belief (whether people think it's essential). These axes allow for nuanced evaluation of naturalness.
The 8 Axes of the Natural Spectrum Example: "They debated whether organic food was 'more natural.' The 8 axes showed: biological origin (yes), human intervention (less than conventional, but still present), evolutionary history (plants evolved, farming didn't), cultural construction (the whole category is constructed). The axes explained why the debate never ended—'natural' meant different things on different axes."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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An expanded framework adding eight dimensions for more nuanced naturalness evaluation. The additional axes include: 9) Indigenous Knowledge (how it's categorized in different knowledge systems), 10) Religious Classification (whether it's seen as God-given), 11) Legal Status (how law treats it), 12) Economic Value (how it's valued in markets), 13) Aesthetic Judgment (whether it's seen as beautiful), 14) Moral Loading (whether it's seen as good or bad), 15) Purity Discourse (whether it's seen as pure), and 16) Nostalgia Connection (whether it's linked to idealized past). The 16 axes provide comprehensive naturalness analysis.
The 16 Axes of the Natural Spectrum Example: "The GMO debate was mapped on all 16 axes: high on human intervention, low on evolutionary history, contested on moral loading, high on economic value, mixed on religious classification. The axes showed why people talked past each other—they were on different axes, using 'natural' to mean different things."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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A framework for evaluating supernatural claims along eight key dimensions. The 8 axes are: 1) Natural Explanation (whether natural explanations exist), 2) Evidential Support (how much evidence supports it), 3) Internal Consistency (whether the claim is coherent), 4) Cross-Cultural Presence (whether it appears across cultures), 5) Historical Precedent (whether similar claims have been made), 6) Psychological Plausibility (whether psychology can explain it), 7) Sociological Function (what social role it serves), and 8) Personal Experience (whether people report experiencing it). These axes allow for nuanced evaluation of supernatural claims.
The 8 Axes of the Supernatural Spectrum *Example: "The vision claim was mapped on the 8 axes: low on natural explanation (none found), low on evidential support (only personal testimony), high on cross-cultural presence (visions reported everywhere), high on psychological plausibility (well-understood phenomenon). The axes showed why it couldn't be simply dismissed or accepted—it was complicated."*
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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An expanded framework adding eight dimensions for more nuanced supernatural evaluation. The additional axes include: 9) Explanatory Power (what it explains), 10) Moral Implications (what ethics follow from it), 11) Institutional Support (whether institutions back it), 12) Historical Impact (how it shaped history), 13) Artistic Expression (how it appears in art), 14) Ritual Practice (what practices surround it), 15) Experiential Quality (what it feels like), and 16) Transformation Potential (whether it changes lives). The 16 axes provide comprehensive supernatural analysis.
The 16 Axes of the Supernatural Spectrum *Example: "The near-death experience was mapped on all 16 axes: low on natural explanation (not fully explained), medium on evidential support (many reports, hard to verify), high on psychological plausibility, high on experiential quality, high on transformation potential. The axes captured why it mattered to people—even if it couldn't be proven supernatural."*
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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A framework for evaluating normality along eight key dimensions. The 8 axes are: 1) Statistical Frequency (how common it is), 2) Social Acceptance (how accepted it is), 3) Cultural Expectation (whether culture expects it), 4) Historical Precedent (whether it's historically typical), 5) Developmental Trajectory (whether it's typical for age/stage), 6) Functional Adaptation (whether it helps function), 7) Medical Classification (whether medicine pathologizes it), and 8) Legal Status (whether law permits it). These axes allow for nuanced evaluation of normality.
The 8 Axes of the Normal Spectrum Example: "They debated whether her behavior was 'normal.' The 8 axes showed: low on statistical frequency (unusual), medium on social acceptance (depends on group), high on functional adaptation (it worked for her), low on medical classification (not pathologized). The axes explained why no simple answer existed—normal meant different things on different axes."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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