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Anti-Pseudoscience Taylorism

A term applying Frederick Taylor’s principles of scientific management—efficiency, standardization, and rigid control—to the problem of pseudoscience. It treats the fight against irrational beliefs as an industrial process: break down the task into measurable units, standardize the “correct” responses, and monitor compliance. Anti‑pseudoscience Taylorism shows up in automated fact‑checking systems, pre‑approved information diets, and bureaucratized skepticism that reduces critical thinking to checking boxes. It values efficiency over understanding, often producing shallow debunking that fails to address why people believe what they do.
Anti-Pseudoscience Taylorism Example: “The fact‑checking bot flagged her article for ‘unverified claims’ based on a keyword filter—no context, no nuance. That’s anti‑pseudoscience Taylorism: turning science communication into an assembly line.”

Anti-Pseudoscience Fordism

An extension of Fordist mass production principles to the management of public knowledge: standardized, high‑volume, low‑cost debunking delivered through centralized channels. Anti‑pseudoscience Fordism relies on one‑size‑fits‑all messaging, mass‑produced infographics, and algorithmic content moderation that treats all “pseudoscience” as identical. It assumes that the public is a homogenous assembly line of consumers who will accept the same rational message if delivered with sufficient repetition. The result is often alienation, as diverse audiences feel their specific concerns are ignored, and trust in institutions can actually decrease.

Example: “The government’s campaign against alternative health used the same three talking points for every practice—acupuncture, herbalism, energy healing all lumped together. Anti‑pseudoscience Fordism: mass‑producing distrust instead of understanding.”
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