Skip to main content

Synthesis

Absolute trash materials. Garbage, Worst medical supplies on this planet. Don't ever put it in or around your body. 99.9% chance of dying or Lawsuits headed yo way. Synthesis= Snakes= Venom.
I would rather eat horse shit and jerk off a monkey than put synthesis trash in my body.

"Sir your leg is broken we are going to have to fix you with synthesis."

I would rather have you amputate my leg and piss in my eyeballs than put that shit in my body.
by yourmoma100187 May 29, 2018
mugGet the Synthesis mug.

Synthesis anarchism

A form of anarchist philosophy that seeks to reconcile and unite all anti-capitalist anarchists together for a common goal. This includes anarcho-communists, anarcho-collectivists, anarcho-syndicalists, mutualists, left market anarchists, individualist anarchists and sometimes even egoists, geolibertarians and agorists.
Except ancaps, for obvious reasons. Fuck ancaps.
Anarchist meeting:
Egoist: "Yo, who that dude who is trying to mediate the argument between the ancom and the mutualist?"
Ansynd: "Ahh, that's some dude who says he follows something called 'synthesis anarchism'. He basically thinks he can get us all to get along. I admire his goals, but that's so fucking naive. At least he has enough sense to not invite any bloody ancaps here."
by ThatoneguyGM April 4, 2021
mugGet the Synthesis anarchism mug.
The alchemical dream of creating critical materials—rare metals, advanced alloys, strategic minerals—from common elements, bypassing mines, supply chains, and geopolitical complications. If you could synthesize titanium as easily as plastic, or create rare earths from clay, or manufacture semiconductors from sand, the global balance of power would shift overnight. Nations that lack resources could become resource-independent; nations that have resources would lose their leverage. The science is real in principle—transmutation is possible, and advanced materials can be synthesized—but the economics are brutal. It's cheaper to dig things up than to make them from scratch, at least for now. Strategic resource synthesis is the dream of every resource-poor nation and the nightmare of every resource-rich one.
Synthesis of Strategic Resources and Related Materials Example: "The country had no oil, no rare earths, no strategic minerals. But it had smart scientists and a determination to synthesize what it needed. After decades of research, they could make anything from common elements—at ten times the cost of mining it. Strategic independence was achieved; economic sanity was not. The debate continues."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
mugGet the Synthesis of Strategic Resources and Related Materials mug.
The specific challenge of creating the 17 elements known as rare earths—along with their alloys and compounds—from more common materials. Rare earths aren't actually rare in the earth's crust; they're just rarely concentrated enough to mine economically. They're also essential for everything from smartphones to electric vehicles to missile guidance systems. Synthesizing them would end dependence on the few countries that control their mining and processing, potentially reshaping global power dynamics. The science is difficult because rare earths are chemically similar and hard to separate, but progress is being made. The dream is a world where rare earths are as common and cheap as aluminum, and no nation can hold the world hostage by controlling their supply.
Synthesis of Rare Earths and Related Materials Example: "The startup promised to synthesize rare earths from coal waste, freeing the West from dependence on foreign suppliers. Investors poured money in. The process worked—in the lab, at small scale, with pure inputs. Scaling up to industrial production with real-world waste proved harder. Years later, they were still scaling. Rare earths remained rare, just slightly less so."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
mugGet the Synthesis of Rare Earths and Related Materials mug.
The decades-long quest to create the world's most important industrial materials without drilling holes in the ground or tapping trees. Petroleum synthesis (from coal, natural gas, or biomass) is real and practiced at scale—Fischer-Tropsch plants turn gas into liquid fuels, especially where oil is expensive and gas is cheap. Rubber synthesis is even more successful: most rubber today is synthetic, made from petroleum. The frontier is making these processes cheaper, cleaner, and more efficient, and eventually making them from renewable sources. The dream is a world where transportation fuels come from air and water, where tires are made from plants, and where the petroleum age ends not because we ran out of oil but because we found something better.
Synthesis of Petroleum, Rubber and Related Materials Example: "The plant synthesized diesel from natural gas, producing fuel that burned cleaner than oil-derived diesel. It worked perfectly, at scale, for decades. Environmentalists hated it because natural gas. Oil companies hated it because competition. The plant didn't care; it just made fuel. Synthesis had won, quietly, without anyone noticing."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
mugGet the Synthesis of Petroleum, Rubber and Related Materials mug.
The grand project of human civilization: making what we need from what we have, transforming common elements into advanced materials, turning sand into silicon, air into fertilizer, water into fuel. Synthesis is the opposite of extraction—instead of taking resources from the earth, we create them from basic building blocks. The dream is complete materials independence, where nothing is rare because everything can be made. The reality is incremental progress, step by step, material by material. We've learned to synthesize plastics, medicines, fibers, fuels. We're learning to synthesize rare earths, advanced alloys, perfect crystals. The endpoint, if there is one, is a world where the only limit is imagination—and energy, because synthesis always costs energy. But energy can also be synthesized, from the sun, from the wind, from the atoms themselves.
Synthesis of Resources and Materials Example: "He looked at his phone—synthesized silicon, synthesized rare earths, synthesized polymers—and realized that almost nothing in it came directly from nature. Everything was transformed, refined, synthesized. Civilization was one giant synthesis project, turning rocks into tools, air into food, ideas into reality. He put the phone down and went outside, where nature was still doing it the old way."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
mugGet the Synthesis of Resources and Materials mug.
The ultimate alchemy: creating the fundamental building blocks of matter—protons, neutrons, electrons, quarks, and the rest of the particle zoo—from energy itself, as Einstein's E=mc² promises is possible. Particle accelerators do this routinely, smashing things together to create showers of exotic particles that exist for fractions of a second before decaying. The dream is controlled, efficient synthesis—creating matter from energy on demand, building whatever you need from the quantum field up. This would be the ultimate manufacturing technology: a replicator worthy of science fiction, capable of making anything from pure energy. The reality is that particle synthesis requires more energy than it releases, by many orders of magnitude. But if we ever crack that nut—if we ever achieve net-positive energy-to-matter conversion—civilization changes forever.
Synthesis of Particles and Subparticles Example: "The particle accelerator synthesized a new element, creating atoms that had never existed on Earth. They lasted for milliseconds, then decayed into nothing. The scientists celebrated, then calculated how much energy it had taken—enough to power a small city. They were a long way from replicators. But they'd made something from nothing, which is how all creation stories start."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
mugGet the Synthesis of Particles and Subparticles mug.

Share this definition

Sign in to vote

We'll email you a link to sign in instantly.

Or

Check your email

We sent a link to

Open your email