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Structure analysis

A pain in ass as you just follow the fucken shear flow and forces in fucken seal or aluminum stuff.
And also you calculate the deformation in beams and bars in machines and walls. why the fuck you not just make the things from very strong material and fuck the cost?!
Also in it you calculate the work, energy and stress in that stuff.
summary: just a fucken engineering science that you fucked up in its exams in a fucken a lot of steps to just get damn number.
Structure analysis is so damn Hard.
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Psychoarchaeoplaylistology Analysis 

The study/use of an individual's or individuals' personal playlist in chronological order to uncover what psychological phenomena they were experiencing at the time they added/listened to the music.
Psychoarchaeoplaylistology Analysis revealed that Tera was going through a breakup in part due to the exorbitant amount of Marianna's Trench in her 2012 playlist.

Real Analysis 

Math from the planet nahfalafagus. We use latex and take turns doing the notes. Tom“teaches” it.
Real analysis makes math majors question why they chose that major.

Critical Analysis of Evidence, Science, and Logic

A methodological approach that applies critical theory to the concepts of evidence, science, and logic themselves. It asks how these concepts have been used to exclude, silence, and naturalize power. It reveals that appeals to “evidence” can mask epistemic injustice, that “science” can function as a gatekeeper for colonial knowledge hierarchies, and that “logic” can be weaponized against those whose reasoning does not fit classical norms.
Example: “The critical analysis of evidence, science, and logic revealed that the demand for ‘evidence’ from indigenous communities was often a demand for assimilation—proof according to Western standards became a tool of epistemic violence.”

Critical Analysis of Official Discourse

A methodological approach that deconstructs official language to expose its ideological functions, hidden assumptions, and power effects. Critical analysis goes beyond describing how institutions speak; it asks what those speaking practices do—whom they empower, whom they silence, what realities they produce. It draws on critical theory, discourse analysis, and post‑structuralism to show that official discourse is never neutral; it is a site of struggle.
Example: “The critical analysis of official discourse revealed that the company’s ‘diversity statement’ used the same grammar as their risk disclosures—framing people as assets to be managed, not communities to be respected.”

Critical Analysis of Social Media

A branch of social media studies that applies critical theory—particularly frameworks of power, ideology, and political economy—to understand social media not as neutral tools but as sites of exploitation, control, and ideological reproduction. It examines surveillance capitalism, algorithmic bias, platform labor, the commodification of attention, and the role of social media in political polarization and democratic erosion. Critical analysis asks whose interests platforms serve, how they shape perception, and what alternatives might look like. It is an essential corrective to techno‑utopian narratives.
Example: “Her critical analysis of social media showed that the ‘free’ platform was actually extracting data, attention, and emotional labor while offloading the costs of content moderation onto unpaid users.”

Critical Analysis of the Internet

A critical approach within internet studies that examines the internet through lenses of power, capital, colonialism, and ideology. It challenges the narrative of the internet as inherently liberating, revealing how it reproduces and amplifies existing inequalities: digital divides, surveillance infrastructure, platform capitalism, algorithmic discrimination, and the extraction of value from users. Critical analysis also explores counter‑movements: net neutrality activism, open source communities, digital rights advocacy, and attempts to build decentralized, community‑owned networks. It insists that the internet is not a given but a contested terrain.
Example: “His critical analysis of the internet traced how Silicon Valley’s ‘connectivity’ rhetoric masked the construction of a global surveillance apparatus—not liberation, but control.”