A branch of infrascience that examines the infrastructure underlying scientific orthodoxy—the foundational systems, structures, and conditions that make it possible for orthodoxies to form, persist, and function. The infrascience of scientific orthodoxy investigates what must be in place for consensus to exist: communication infrastructure (journals, conferences, preprint servers) that enables scientists to know what others think; institutional infrastructure (universities, research centers, funding agencies) that creates the conditions for shared training and shared assumptions; technological infrastructure (databases, citation networks, collaboration tools) that makes it possible to track and transmit consensus; and social infrastructure (professional societies, reputation systems, trust networks) that creates the communities within which orthodoxy forms. It also examines how this infrastructure shapes what orthodoxy becomes—how changes in communication technology transform consensus formation, how funding structures influence which views become orthodox, how institutional arrangements can make orthodoxy more or less resistant to change. The infrascience of scientific orthodoxy reveals that consensus is never just agreement—it's agreement built on infrastructure, and understanding orthodoxy requires understanding the systems that enable it.
Example: "Her infrascience of scientific orthodoxy analysis showed how the rise of preprint servers changed consensus formation—not by changing the evidence, but by changing the infrastructure through which scientists encounter it. The same science, different orthodoxy dynamics, because the pipes changed."
by Abzugal March 16, 2026
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