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This theory critiques the tyranny of the measurable. It analyzes how the demand for quantifiable, "hard" data becomes a mechanism of control by invalidating anything that can't be easily numbered. What gets measured (productivity clicks, test scores) gets managed, and what can't be measured (creativity, wellbeing, ethical nuance) gets ignored or marginalized. Control is enforced by making the quantitative the only real currency of credibility.
Theory of Empirical Social Control Example: A teacher is forced to "teach to the test" because her school's funding and her job security are tied solely to standardized student test scores. This is empirical social control. The complex, holistic process of education is reduced to a few narrow, quantifiable metrics. This controls the teacher's behavior, stifles creative pedagogy, and defines student "success" in a way that serves bureaucratic oversight rather than actual learning.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 7, 2026
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