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The theory that "naturalness" exists on a spectrum, not as a binary category. What counts as natural varies across contexts, cultures, and historical periods—things once considered natural (slavery, patriarchy) are now seen as social constructions; things once considered unnatural (homosexuality, women working) are now recognized as natural variations. The Natural Spectrum recognizes that naturalness is not a property of things themselves but of their relationship to cultural categories, scientific understanding, and historical context. A smartphone is unnatural in one sense (not found in nature) but natural in another (made from natural materials by natural beings). The theory calls for mapping where phenomena fall on multiple axes of naturalness.
Example: "He argued about what was 'natural' as if it were simple. The Theory of the Natural Spectrum showed why it wasn't: a virus was natural in one sense (biological), unnatural in another (harmful), natural in another (evolutionary product). The spectrum revealed that 'natural' was doing many jobs, not one."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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