Critical Theory of Natural Sciences
The application of Critical Theory to the natural sciences—biology, chemistry, physics, and fields studying the natural world—examining how they're shaped by social forces and how they can serve domination or liberation. Critical Theory of Natural Sciences asks: How have natural sciences been used to justify racism, sexism, colonialism? How do funding and institutional power shape research agendas? Could natural sciences be practiced differently—more democratically, more ecologically, more justly? Drawing on feminist science studies, postcolonial science studies, and environmental justice, it insists that natural sciences are never just natural—they're social through and through.
"Science is science, they say. Critical Theory of Natural Sciences asks: whose science? Funded by whom? For what purposes? Biology justified eugenics; medicine experimented on enslaved people. Natural sciences have histories of harm. That doesn't make them wrong; it makes them human. Critical theory insists on remembering those histories—and building science that doesn't repeat them."
Critical Theory of Natural Sciences by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
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