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Scientific Violence

The use of scientific authority, language, or institutions to harm, marginalize, or silence individuals or groups—whether through pathologizing their beliefs, excluding them from research participation, or weaponizing findings against them. Scientific violence can be overt (e.g., forced sterilization based on eugenic theories) or subtle (e.g., labeling spiritual practices as ‘delusional’ and demanding psychiatric intervention). It occurs when science is treated not as a provisional, self-correcting method but as an infallible weapon to enforce conformity to a materialist worldview. It often hides behind claims of neutrality while serving existing power structures.
Example: “The doctor cited ‘evidence-based medicine’ to refuse her request for traditional healing, then added that her beliefs were ‘unscientific delusions’—scientific violence, using the prestige of science to dismiss cultural practices and humiliate the patient.”
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Scientific Evidence Violence

The use of scientific evidence demands as a weapon to inflict psychological, social, or professional harm on individuals or groups. This violence can take the form of organized online harassment campaigns that demand impossible evidence from targets, then mock them for failing; institutional policies that deny accommodations or rights because a practice lacks “evidence”; or public shaming that equates absence of evidence with fraud or mental illness. Scientific evidence violence is not merely rhetorical; it destroys reputations, blocks access to resources, and can drive people from communities or professions.
Example: “The online mob demanded she ‘prove’ her spiritual experiences with peer‑reviewed data, then doxxed her when she couldn’t—scientific evidence violence, using evidentiary standards as a pretext for harassment.”

Scientific Evidence Alienation

The sense of estrangement, exclusion, or illegitimacy experienced by individuals or groups whose ways of knowing do not conform to dominant scientific evidence standards. This alienation occurs when people are told that their personal experiences, cultural traditions, or spiritual insights are “not real” because they lack empirical validation. Over time, they may internalize the message that their own perceptions are unreliable, that their communities are backward, or that they have no place in discourse about truth. Scientific evidence alienation is a form of epistemic injustice, systematically marginalizing non‑dominant knowledge systems.

Example: “She stopped sharing her family’s herbal remedies after being told repeatedly that ‘without studies, it’s just superstition’—scientific evidence alienation, being made to feel that her heritage was intellectually worthless.”

Scientific Method Violence

The use of methodological purity as a weapon to discredit, exclude, or harm individuals or fields that do not conform to a rigid model of the scientific method. This violence can occur in academia, where qualitative researchers are denied tenure because their work is labeled “unscientific”; in policy, where community knowledge is ignored because it wasn’t produced via RCTs; or online, where critics demand that spiritual or experiential claims follow experimental protocols as a way to mock and silence. Scientific method violence entrenches a hierarchy of knowledge that benefits certain disciplines and harms others.
Example: “The funding committee rejected her ethnographic proposal because it wasn’t ‘hypothesis‑driven’—scientific method violence, using methodological orthodoxy to exclude legitimate research.”

Scientific Method Alienation

The feeling of being excluded or delegitimized experienced by researchers, practitioners, or knowledge‑holders whose work does not fit the dominant model of the scientific method. This alienation is common among qualitative social scientists, historians, field ecologists, and indigenous knowledge keepers, who are often told their methods are “not real science.” Over time, they may internalize a sense of inferiority or abandon valuable approaches to mimic a method ill‑suited to their questions. Scientific method alienation impoverishes knowledge production by narrowing what counts as legitimate inquiry.

Example: “She loved studying complex ecological systems, but the department’s focus on lab experiments made her feel like a fake scientist—scientific method alienation, being made to doubt the value of her own methods.”

Scientific Method Violence

The use of the scientific method—or rather, the appeal to it—as a justification for psychological, social, or institutional violence against those whose beliefs, practices, or identities are deemed "unscientific." This can include public humiliation, coordinated harassment campaigns, denial of employment or housing, and exclusion from communities, all framed as "defending science." Scientific method violence does not involve physical force but is violence nonetheless: it destroys reputations, isolates individuals, and coerces conformity under the banner of rationality. It is often perpetrated by online skeptic communities, new atheists, and scientific fundamentalists.
Example: "They organized a digital mob to mock her spiritual beliefs, then justified it as 'defending the scientific method.' Scientific method violence: using reason as a weapon."

Scientific Method Alienation

A state of estrangement from the scientific method caused by its weaponization against one's own beliefs, identity, or community. When people experience repeated attacks in the name of "science" or "rationality," they may come to see the scientific method not as a tool for inquiry but as an instrument of exclusion. This alienation is particularly acute for religious and spiritual individuals, indigenous knowledge keepers, and anyone whose worldview does not fit strict materialism. The result is a tragic divide: those who might have engaged productively with science are pushed away by the very people who claim to champion it.

Example: "After years of being called 'irrational' for her traditional healing practices, she no longer trusted any scientific claim—scientific method alienation, where the cure becomes the poison."

Scientistic Violence

A particularly dogmatic form of scientific violence rooted in scientism—the belief that science is the only legitimate path to knowledge and that anything beyond its scope is meaningless or false. Scientistic violence dismisses philosophy, art, spirituality, and subjective experience not just as different but as worthless or harmful. It often manifests in online debates where participants demand “peer‑reviewed evidence” for emotional or existential claims, then mock the inability to provide it. The violence lies in denying entire domains of human experience any validity, forcing people to either abandon their values or be labeled irrational.
Example: “He told her that her grief for a lost pet was ‘biochemically reducible’ and that poetry was ‘noise without data’—scientistic violence, using the authority of science to erase the meaningful and the human.”

country mile 

When country folk refer to a country mile it is considerd to be round 10 miles per country mile..ish...we boonfolk dont really consider distance
"I walked a country mile to see Earls new truck"
country mile by CountryBoy1243 August 30, 2006
Word of the Day on July 4, 2026

Regular Degular 

Plain. Not tampered with or upgraded. Basic.
May I have an order of regular degular buttermilk pancakes? Without all the added jazz? Hold the blueberry smiley face, strawberry glaze, chocolate chips and whipped cream.
Regular Degular by 1Bynum August 13, 2023
Word of the Day on July 3, 2026