Naturalist Violence
Physical, psychological, or structural harm directed at individuals or groups because of their non‑naturalist beliefs or practices. Naturalist violence can range from verbal abuse and public humiliation to denial of services, employment discrimination, forced medicalization (e.g., labeling spiritual experiences as psychosis), and even physical assault in extreme cases. It is often justified by claiming to defend “science” or “reason” from “superstition.” Naturalist violence is most common in contexts where naturalism is the dominant ideology—e.g., certain academic departments, online skeptic communities, or state‑sponsored secularism.
Example: “The patient was forcibly medicated after reporting a near‑death experience, with doctors dismissing her account as ‘hallucination’—naturalist violence, using institutional power to pathologize spiritual belief.”
Naturalist Alienation
A form of social and epistemic exclusion experienced by non‑naturalists in environments dominated by naturalist ideology. Naturalist alienation occurs when individuals feel that their core beliefs are not merely disagreed with but are systematically invalidated, mocked, or treated as signs of unfitness for full participation in society. It can lead to self‑censorship, withdrawal from public discourse, and internalized shame. In academic or professional settings, naturalist alienation often forces people to hide their spiritual or metaphysical commitments to avoid being seen as “unscientific” or “irrational.”
Example: “She stopped mentioning her Buddhist practice at work after colleagues started joking about ‘magic’ behind her back—naturalist alienation, where silence becomes the price of belonging.”
Naturalist Alienation
A form of social and epistemic exclusion experienced by non‑naturalists in environments dominated by naturalist ideology. Naturalist alienation occurs when individuals feel that their core beliefs are not merely disagreed with but are systematically invalidated, mocked, or treated as signs of unfitness for full participation in society. It can lead to self‑censorship, withdrawal from public discourse, and internalized shame. In academic or professional settings, naturalist alienation often forces people to hide their spiritual or metaphysical commitments to avoid being seen as “unscientific” or “irrational.”
Example: “She stopped mentioning her Buddhist practice at work after colleagues started joking about ‘magic’ behind her back—naturalist alienation, where silence becomes the price of belonging.”
Naturalist Violence by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal April 16, 2026
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