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Conceptually adjacent

You don't actually think any of that. I told you to articulate what is happening in a manner that is accurate and what you are doing is feining a conception of reality that is deliberately conceptually adjacent to what is actually the case and then casting aspersions on my articulation of event even though both of us know for a fact that you are doing THAT and that mine is accurate.
Hym Iam "Conceptually adjacent but, no, you don't actually think an of that."
by Hym Iam January 16, 2026
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Scientific Conceptualism

The position that scientific concepts are not simply discovered in nature but are human creations that shape what we can think and observe. "Gene," "species," "force," "mental illness"—these aren't natural kinds waiting to be found; they're tools we've developed to organize experience. They're real in their effects, but their reality depends on our conceptual activity. Scientific Conceptualism studies how concepts are born, how they change, and how they die. It's the science of how science thinks its own thoughts.
"Before 'trauma' was a concept, people had the experiences but couldn't name them. Scientific Conceptualism says: the concept didn't just describe something pre-existing—it created a new way to be a person. Concepts aren't just labels; they're world-makers."
by Abzugal February 23, 2026
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The position that knowledge is structured by concepts that are human creations, not discoveries about the world. "Cause," "truth," "evidence," "knowledge" itself—these aren't natural kinds waiting to be found; they're tools we've developed to organize experience. They're real in their effects, but their reality depends on our conceptual activity. Epistemological Conceptualism studies how epistemic concepts are born, how they change, how they die, and how they shape what we can claim to know. It's knowing about knowing, aware that its own tools are made, not found.
"You keep appealing to 'common sense' as if it's universal. Epistemological Conceptualism says: 'common sense' is a concept with a history, shaped by your culture, class, and century. It's not a foundation—it's a construction. Use it if helpful, but don't pretend it's nature speaking."
by Abzugal February 23, 2026
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