Frankenstein Materialism
The actual ontological condition of a world where multiple, irreducible material layers coexist and interact. It is the world as we live it: atoms, cells, trees, cities, economies, and meanings are all material, but they are not reducible to each other. Frankenstein Materialism acknowledges that a human is simultaneously a quantum system, a biochemical machine, a living organism, a social actor, and a meaning-maker. No single science captures the whole. This perspective is anti-reductionist and post-disciplinary.
Example: “His Frankenstein Materialism led him to study poverty through physics (infrastructure), biology (malnutrition), psychology (trauma), and sociology (inequality)—all material, all needed.”
Frankenstein Materialism by Dumu The Void May 26, 2026
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