This section specifies the conditions under which a field’s standard idealizations are considered acceptable and when they fail. For each discipline, it identifies the ranges of scale, strength, speed, disorder, noise, and complexity where approximations like “point mass,” “perfect fluid,” “infinite population,” or “representative agent” remain reliable, and where neglected effects (quantum, relativistic, nonlinear, heterogeneous, stochastic, or contextual) become too large to ignore. In the template, this row anchors simplifications to explicit domains of validity, so models are not just simpler than reality, but clearly bounded in where they can be trusted.
Science Analysis Template
Below are the results of cycles 1 & 2 of The Science Project
Scientific models and theories rely on idealizations – simplified assumptions that make problems tractable. Every such model has validity conditions, the limits and contexts in which its assumptions hold true and beyond which the model breaks down. Interestingly, across the natural sciences, social sciences, formal sciences, and mathematics, these validity conditions exhibit recurring patterns. In general, idealized theories work under moderate or controlled conditions (e.g. small perturbations, large system size, weak interactions, equilibrium, homogeneity) and fail when pushed to extremes (e.g. high speeds, tiny scales, strong coupling, rapid changes, disorder). Below, we outline the comprehensive and consistent patterns in validity conditions that appear across all sciences, illustrating how similar principles constrain models from physics to sociology.
Domain of Applicability and Scale Limits
A common pattern is that each theory is only valid within a certain domain of scale or regime, and crossing that threshold requires a more fundamental theory. For example, classical mechanics accurately describes macroscopic objects at everyday speeds, but it fails for very small objects or very high speeds. At atomic dimensions, classical physics breaks down and quantum mechanics is required; similarly, as velocity approaches the speed of light or gravity becomes extreme, relativity must be used. In short, idealizations hold by ignoring certain effects that are negligible in one domain but not in another – e.g. neglecting quantum and relativistic effects in everyday physics works fine for mid-size objects, but not for electrons or near-light-speed travel. This pattern appears throughout science: each model applies only between certain scale limits. A fluid treated as a continuous medium assumes molecules are effectively invisible; if the mean free path of molecules becomes comparable to the system size (Knudsen number ≈ 1), the continuum assumption is no longer a good approximation and one must revert to molecular (statistical) descriptions. Likewise in biology, population genetics assumes large populations; if population size becomes very small, stochastic genetic drift and discrete individual effects dominate, violating the idealizations of infinite or well-mixed populations. Nearly every field has this layered hierarchy of theories: an idealized model for the “normal” regime and different models when fundamental scale thresholds are crossed.
Linear Regimes and Small Perturbations
Another ubiquitous validity condition is the requirement of small perturbations and linear response. Many scientific models assume that deviations from an equilibrium or baseline are sufficiently small that the system responds linearly. Under this assumption, effects are proportional to causes and superpose simply – a dramatic simplification. Acoustics and fluid dynamics illustrate this: standard wave equations assume pressure or velocity fluctuations are infinitesimal compared to the background, leading to linear sound waves. This idealization holds when amplitudes are small, but if the disturbance grows too large, nonlinear effects emerge (e.g. shock waves form when sound waves of sufficiently large amplitude steepen), thus breaking the linear acoustic approximation. Similarly, materials science and engineering often assume linear elasticity (strain is proportional to stress) which is valid only for small deformations; beyond a certain strain, materials yield or respond nonlinearly, violating the idealization of linear stress–strain behavior. In climate and ecology models, linearization (treating feedbacks or responses as proportional to perturbations) works for modest changes, but extreme disturbances can lead to tipping points or chaotic responses that the linear model cannot capture. Indeed, even in deterministic classical mechanics, if a system is nonlinear and chaotic, tiny differences can grow exponentially (the “butterfly effect”), making long-term predictions unreliable. The broad pattern is that idealizations often rely on being in a linear regime – when changes are incremental and higher-order terms are negligible – and they break down when systems enter strongly nonlinear regimes (large oscillations, high field intensities, turbulent flows, etc.).
Scale Separation and Continuum Approximation
Nearly all scientific idealizations presume some form of scale separation – a clear gap between the scales of phenomena of interest and the smaller scales that are being averaged or ignored. Under this pattern, a system can be treated as a continuum or a homogeneous average because fine-grained details “wash out.” For instance, continuum mechanics (fluid dynamics, solid mechanics) assumes the characteristic length scale of interest is much larger than the microscale (molecular mean free path or grain size). When this condition holds (e.g. at low Knudsen number), treating matter as continuous is valid; if the scale separation disappears (molecule mean free path comparable to system size), the continuum model fails and one must use statistical or discrete models. In thermodynamics and statistical mechanics, this manifests as requiring very large numbers of particles: only in the thermodynamic limit (particles → ∞, with volume and density fixed) do properties like temperature and entropy become well-defined and fluctuations average out. With huge ensembles, the law of large numbers ensures stable macroscopic behavior, but in a nanoscale system with few particles, random fluctuations and quantum granularity cause standard thermodynamic relations to break down. Classical electromagnetic theory similarly assumes fields vary smoothly over space and time, ignoring atomic-scale structure; it breaks down at wavelengths comparable to atomic spacings or at extremely high field gradients where quantum effects or atomic discreteness become important. Across disciplines, the continuum/averaging idealization is valid when there is a hierarchy of scales – a large gap between the macro-scale and the micro-scale – and fails when that hierarchy collapses (requiring a more fine-grained, often probabilistic or quantum, description).
Weak Coupling and Perturbative Approaches
Many idealized models assume that interactions, coupling, or deviations are weak, enabling them to be treated as small corrections to an ideal case. Under this pattern, systems are modeled as nearly independent components with only minor interactions, or a perturbation expansion is used where higher-order interaction terms are assumed to be negligible. This approach holds when coupling constants or interaction strengths are sufficiently small, but it breaks down for strong coupling. A clear example is perturbation theory in quantum physics: calculations in quantum electrodynamics or quantum mechanics often expand in a series assuming a small parameter (like the fine-structure constant or an external field). These series yield accurate results only when the expansion parameter is very small; if the perturbation is not small, the series diverges or fails to converge. In quantum chromodynamics (QCD), at low energies the strong force coupling constant becomes large, violating the requirement that perturbative corrections remain small – hence perturbation theory fails in the strongly coupled regime. The same pattern appears outside physics: in chemistry, models often assume weakly interacting molecules (ideal gas, dilute solutions); at high concentrations or with strong intermolecular forces (e.g. hydrogen bonding in water, or concentrated electrolyte solutions), ideal solution or gas laws break down as interactions can no longer be treated as minor. In ecology or economics, models may assume individuals or agents interact weakly (or average effects linearly), but in reality strong coupling (like network effects, herd behavior, predator-prey cycles) can produce nonlinear collective phenomena outside the scope of the simple model. Across all fields, idealizations often work by neglecting higher-order interaction terms, an approximation justified only when those interactions are indeed weak or rare. When interactions become strong or collective behaviors dominate, one must abandon the perturbative or independent-particle idealization and use a more complex, often non-linear or non-perturbative framework.
Equilibrium and Slow Processes vs. Rapid Changes
Idealized models frequently assume systems are in or near equilibrium (steady state or slowly varying conditions). This means any changes happen so gradually that the system can adjust continuously, or the system is considered in a stable balance without sudden surges. Such assumptions underpin classical thermodynamics, which requires processes to be quasi-static – proceeding infinitely slowly – in order to treat them as reversible and in equilibrium at each step. In reality, if a process happens rapidly (say, an explosion or a sudden pressure drop), classical thermodynamic formulas based on equilibrium can give very wrong answers, as irreversible entropy production and non-equilibrium dynamics come into play. The validity condition here is a separation of time scales: the process of interest must be much slower than the system’s relaxation time, so that the system stays near equilibrium. This pattern extends broadly. Climate models that assume a smoothly changing climate or focus on average states struggle to capture abrupt events or extreme fluctuations; in fact, current global climate models are known to under-represent the severity of short-lived extreme weather events, because their coarse resolution and equilibrium assumptions fail under those extreme, nonlinear conditions. Likewise, in geology, uniformitarian models assume slow, cumulative changes (erosion, sedimentation over millennia) and may be invalid during sudden catastrophes like massive earthquakes or volcanic eruptions. In physiology, models of organ function often assume steady-state homeostasis; those models break down during acute stress, shock, or rapid feedback crises (e.g. sudden blood loss or adrenaline surges cause nonlinear responses that steady-state models can’t handle). Across disciplines, idealizations are usually tuned to slow, gentle evolution of a system and they break when confronted with fast transients, abrupt transitions, or far-from-equilibrium dynamics. In such cases, new models accounting for time-dependent changes, hysteresis, or irreversible processes are required.
Homogeneity and Uniformity vs. Heterogeneity and Disorder
Many scientific models assume a degree of homogeneity, symmetry, or uniformity in the system – essentially smoothing over complexity by assuming parts of the system behave identically or average out. This idealization holds under conditions of low disorder or controlled uniformity, but it fails in the presence of significant heterogeneity or broken symmetry. For example, solid-state physics and materials science often start with perfect crystals: translational symmetry and a uniform lattice allow band theory to predict electronic behavior. These models are valid for high-quality crystals with few defects, but real materials with many defects, impurities, or amorphous structure will deviate from the ideal predictions. A solid-state theory assuming a uniform crystal lattice breaks down for amorphous solids or heavily defected materials, which require more complex approaches (or numerical simulations) since the ideal periodic boundary conditions no longer apply. In fluid dynamics, analyzing a flow often assumes a symmetric or simple geometry (say, smooth parallel streamlines or a uniform pipe); if the flow environment is highly irregular (rough boundaries, obstacles) or turbulent, the symmetry is broken and simple analytic solutions fail. We see this pattern also in Earth sciences: a model of gentle geomorphology might assume uniform soil and slope, but natural landscapes have heterogeneous substrates and complex terrain, causing the model to fail under real conditions of variable rock types, vegetation patches, etc. Climatology often assumes a smoothly varying field (like radiation or humidity) over large areas, yet actual conditions can be highly heterogeneous (microclimates, localized convection) which violate those assumptions.
The same principle applies in social sciences: models in economics or sociology frequently assume a relatively homogeneous population or representative agent (for analytical tractability). For instance, classical economic models treat all individuals as rational utility-maximizers with similar information – a huge idealization of human behavior. This assumption of homogeneity and perfect rationality can yield useful first approximations, but it breaks down when confronted with real-world diversity and cognitive limitations. As Herbert Simon and others pointed out, humans have bounded rationality, meaning they often satisfice rather than optimize due to limited information and cognitive capacity. Therefore, economic predictions based on perfectly rational, identical agents can fail in situations where individuals behave irrationally or when populations are segmented into groups with different preferences, information, or constraints. In sociology, simple network or interaction models might assume everyone interacts in the same way or that social ties are uniformly distributed; however, actual social networks are highly heterogeneous (with hubs, communities, and outliers), so uniform models miss critical dynamics and can break down especially in fragmented or stratified societies. Across all fields, we find that idealizations are easiest when systems are assumed uniform or symmetric, but complex realities with heterogeneity, disorder, or asymmetry force those models beyond their validity. The validity condition is essentially that any deviations from uniformity (whether impurities in a crystal, anomalies in data, or diversity in a population) are small enough not to upset the overall behavior. When deviations are large – e.g. strongly disordered systems, highly diverse populations, or significant asymmetries – one must use more sophisticated or localized models that account for that complexity.
Simplified Subsystems and Isolation vs. Open Systems and Interactions
Another recurring theme in validity conditions is the assumption that the system can be treated in isolation or with simplified subsystem interactions. In physics experiments, one often assumes a closed system with no external forces or perturbations (ceteris paribus), so that the idealized theory applies. This holds in controlled lab conditions but fails if external influences become significant. For example, an ideal pendulum model assumes no air resistance and no moving support; in a real environment, those external factors (air drag, vibrations) will eventually spoil the simple periodic motion if they become large. In chemistry, reaction rate theories might assume a closed reactor; but in an open environment (changing temperature, introduction of contaminants) the ideal kinetics break down. In biology, a common idealization is studying cells or organisms in isolation (or in a simplified lab culture) – this can predict behavior in that controlled setting, but in a living organism or ecosystem (open systems with constant inputs/outputs and multiple feedback loops) the idealized behavior changes. For instance, an enzyme kinetics model (Michaelis-Menten) assumes ideal conditions of constant temperature, pH, and no interference; inside a cell, however, crowding, pH fluctuations, and other pathways interacting can push the enzyme’s behavior outside the simple model’s validity. In engineering and environmental science, models often neglect “edge effects” or assume ideal boundary conditions (like perfect insulation, or a structure in vacuum). These are valid when those external couplings are truly negligible, but in practice no system is perfectly isolated – thus the idealization is an approximation that can break if, say, heat leaks significantly through insulation or if a structure experiences unexpected external forces. The general pattern is that idealizations often wall off the system from complicating factors, and their validity requires that this isolation be realistic or that cross-couplings remain insignificant. When a system is strongly open – exchanging matter, energy, or information with its surroundings – or when multiple subsystems interact in complex ways, superposition breaks down and the simple isolated model must be refined to include those influences.
Summary and Conclusion
Despite the immense diversity of scientific disciplines, the patterns of validity conditions for their idealized models are strikingly similar. Nearly all sciences simplify reality by assuming some influences are negligible, some parameter is small or large, or some structure is regular – and thus their theories work only within certain limits. When those limits are exceeded, the assumptions crumble and the model fails, signaling the need for either more complex models or a transition to a different theoretical framework. Common themes include assuming linearity (valid for small perturbations), assuming a separation of scales (valid when phenomena can be averaged over finer details), assuming weak interactions or independence (valid when couplings are minor), assuming equilibrium or steady state (valid when changes are slow), and assuming homogeneity or symmetry (valid when systems lack large irregularities). Violating these conditions – by pushing into highly nonlinear regimes, examining too fine a scale, increasing coupling and feedback strength, driving the system far from equilibrium, or introducing a high degree of disorder and diversity – will invalidate the idealization. In those cases, scientists either refine the model (e.g. adding nonlinear terms, stochastic fluctuations, or heterogeneity) or switch to a more fundamental theory better suited for that regime (e.g. using quantum theory instead of classical, or embracing computational simulations when analytic models get intractable).
In essence, all models are provisional simplifications: they are “valid” only as long as reality behaves within the tame bounds the model expects. Across all fields of science, recognizing these validity conditions is crucial. It allows researchers to know when a simple theory can be safely applied and when to be cautious because conditions approach a model’s breaking point. The remarkable consistency of these patterns – from physics to economics to mathematics – underscores a unifying principle of scientific inquiry: under controlled, moderate conditions nature is often linear, decoupled, and regular, but push things too far (too fast, too small, too strong, too complex) and the simple laws give way to richer, more complicated behavior. Each discipline’s list of “admissible idealizations” and their limits is a testament to this universal principle. By understanding these common patterns, scientists can better map the linea (boundaries) of their models’ applicability and appreciate when an idealized law holds and when it inevitably breaks down.
| Element | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scope Category | ||||
| Sub-Item | Validity Conditions | |||
| Science Name Link | Branch Name Link | Field Name Link | Definition | The limits and contexts in which idealizations hold or break down. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Classical Mechanics | Idealizations hold when object size, deformation, or frictional effects are negligible, and when quantum, relativistic, and microstructural effects do not influence behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Classical Electromagnetism | These idealizations hold when system sizes are large compared to microscopic structure, fields are not extremely strong, material response is approximately linear and isotropic, and quantum, dispersive, or nonlinear effects are negligible. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Classical Thermodynamics | Idealizations hold when systems are large enough for continuum behavior, processes occur slowly enough to approximate reversibility, and intermolecular forces or quantum effects do not dominate. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Statistical Mechanics (Classical) | Holds when particle numbers are huge, correlations decay rapidly, interactions are classical, and quantum effects are negligible relative to thermal energy (kT ≫ quantum level spacing). |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Optics (Classical Wave Theory) | Valid when intensities are moderate (linear optics), wavelengths are not too short, media behave linearly, fields vary slowly in space/time, and absorption, scattering, or dispersion effects are small or well-characterized. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Acoustics | Valid when pressure fluctuations are small relative to ambient pressure, media behave linearly, viscosity and thermal conduction are negligible, wavelengths exceed microscopic scales, and amplitude is low enough to avoid shock formation. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Continuum Mechanics | Idealizations hold when deformation is small, flow remains orderly, material behavior is linear, density variations are negligible, and characteristic scales remain much larger than molecular dimensions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Classical Field Theory | Idealizations hold when field variations are smooth, amplitudes remain within linear limits, sources behave classically, and system scales are far above atomic or quantum domains. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Pre-Relativistic Frameworks | Classical approximations hold when velocities are small compared to light speed, gravitational or electromagnetic propagation delays are negligible, and inertial frames behave consistently with Galilean relativity. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Mechanics | Valid when energies are low compared to relativistic scales, interactions are weak enough for non-relativistic treatment, coherence is maintained, and system size is small enough that quantization dominates classical behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Relativistic Quantum Mechanics | Valid when energies are high enough that relativistic effects matter but not so high that quantum field theory is required. Breaks down when particle creation, annihilation, or field quantization becomes essential. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Special Relativity | Valid when gravitational fields are negligible, acceleration effects are small, and velocities approach or exceed thresholds where classical mechanics breaks down but quantum effects remain unimportant. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | General Relativity | Valid when gravity can be treated geometrically, when system size is large compared to quantum scales, when matter behaves classically, and when curvature is strong enough to matter but not so extreme that quantum gravity is required. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Field Theory (QFT) | Valid when energies fall within ranges where renormalization holds, when interactions are weak enough for perturbation to converge, and when relativistic quantum behavior dominates over classical or non-relativistic effects. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Particle Physics (High-Energy Physics) | Valid when energies exceed thresholds needed to resolve particle substructure, when coupling strengths allow perturbative methods, when collisions are energetic enough for particle creation, and when spacetime curvature is negligible. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Nuclear Physics | Valid when nuclear forces dominate over electromagnetic and weak interactions, when nuclear densities remain stable, and when quantum many-body effects can be approximated by simplified models. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Statistical Physics | Valid at low enough temperatures for quantum statistics to dominate, at densities where indistinguishability matters, and when interactions are weak enough that simplified many-body models remain accurate. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Optics | Valid when fields are sufficiently controlled, decoherence is low, cavity and laser stability are high, and photon statistics dominate over classical noise. Reduces to classical optics when photon numbers are large. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Information Science | Idealizations hold when physical noise is sufficiently low, system isolation is strong, coherence time is long, measurement accuracy is high, and the number of qubits or operations remains within stable NISQ ranges. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | Symmetry & Group Theory | Valid when symmetries are exact or approximately exact, when physical systems respect transformation laws, and when symmetry groups accurately describe conserved quantities or classification schemes. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | Gauge Theory | Perturbation theory works only at weak coupling; continuum approximations fail at very small scales; flat-spacetime assumptions break down with strong gravity; effective descriptions are valid only within their scale range. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | String Theory | Approximations valid only in regimes where coupling is weak, background curvature is small relative to string scale, or specific duality limits apply. Classical string descriptions fail when full quantum effects dominate. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | Differential Geometry in Physics | Smooth approximations fail at singularities or discontinuities; linearization valid only in weak curvature or small-region limits; symmetry assumptions hold only in idealized physical systems. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | Statistical Field Theory | Idealizations hold when fluctuations are small, when symmetry assumptions apply, when coarse-graining is appropriate, or when the system is far from strong-coupling or strongly nonlinear regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics | Idealizations hold when measurement imperfections are small, systems remain isolated, operators remain well-defined, and environmental interactions do not dominate or distort the quantum formalism. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | General Mathematical Physics | Idealizations hold when nonlinearities are small, symmetry assumptions apply, scales are appropriate for continuum or differentiable models, and when neglected terms remain insignificant. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Solid-State Physics | Idealizations hold when disorder is low, interactions are weak or moderate, temperatures are appropriate for harmonic approximations, and band structures remain stable and well-defined. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Semiconductor Physics | Idealizations hold when defect density is low, doping is uniform, carrier interactions are weak, and temperature ranges allow stable band behavior without strong nonlinear effects. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Magnetism & Spin Physics | Valid when interactions are short-range, disorder is small, temperature is stable, and spin coherence or alignment remains well-defined; breaks down near phase transitions or in highly disordered materials. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Superconductivity | Idealizations hold at low disorder, low temperature, weak external fields, and near-equilibrium conditions; break down near the critical temperature or in strongly disordered or high-field regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Soft Matter Physics | Idealizations hold when microscopic detail is less important, when temperature and concentration remain stable, and when deformation remains within linear or weakly nonlinear regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Nanomaterials & Nanostructures | Idealizations hold when size distribution is narrow, structure is uniform, interactions are weak, and defects or environmental effects do not dominate behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Strongly Correlated Electron Systems | Valid when electronic structure is dominated by local interactions, disorder is moderate, temperature allows stable phases, and simplified interaction terms capture dominant behavior without strong coupling breakdown. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Topological Matter | Idealizations hold when disorder is weak, symmetry is not strongly broken, interactions remain moderate, and temperature is low enough to preserve protected states. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Materials Science (Physical Perspective) | Valid when material is uniform, defects are low or controlled, deformations are small, temperature is moderate, and microstructure remains stable; breaks down under extreme conditions or large plastic deformation. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Stellar Astrophysics | Valid when rotation is slow, magnetic fields are weak, mass loss is moderate, and the star is not undergoing violent instabilities; idealizations break down during explosive events, rapid rotation, or strong magnetic activity. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Galactic Astrophysics | Valid when asymmetries are small, turbulence is moderate, star formation is averaged over time, and the galaxy is not undergoing a major merger or strong transient event. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Extragalactic Astrophysics | Valid when spatial resolution is limited, when substructure does not dominate dynamics, when large scale averages are appropriate, and when extreme activity phases or strong asymmetries are absent. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Cosmology | Valid when averaging over large scales, when small structures do not dominate dynamics, when symmetry assumptions hold, and when early universe conditions are approximated correctly; breaks down at small scales or strongly nonlinear regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | High-Energy Astrophysics | Valid when fine structure is unresolved, when symmetry approximations hold, when radiation zones are dominated by single processes, and when variability is slower than observational integration limits; fails in highly turbulent or rapidly varying systems. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Gravitational Astrophysics | Valid when rotation is moderate, atmosphere is stable, internal structure is layered predictably, and planet star interactions are not extreme; breaks down under rapid rotation, strong tidal forces, or chaotic climate regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Planetary Science & Exoplanets | Valid when rotation is moderate, atmosphere is stable, chemical reactions are slow relative to mixing, orbits are not strongly perturbed, and the climate is not dominated by chaotic behavior or extreme external forcing. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Astrochemistry & Interstellar Medium Physics | Valid when density is stable, turbulence is moderate, radiation fields are not extreme, and chemistry evolves slowly; breaks down in shocks, strong radiation zones, rapidly collapsing clouds, or environments with strong grain evolution. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Astrobiology | Valid when comparing Earth like worlds, studying microbial life analogs, assessing known habitability constraints, or modeling atmospheres with limited complexity; breaks down for exotic chemistries or extreme non Earth environments. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Fluid Dynamics | Valid when flow speeds are low, viscosity is negligible, density variations are small, geometry is symmetric, or turbulence is weak; breaks down for high-speed compressible flows, strong shocks, or fully developed turbulence. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Hydrodynamics (Ideal Fluids) | Valid when collisions are sufficient for fluid treatment, resistivity is small, characteristic scales exceed mean free paths, and flow is slow enough for fluid approximations; breaks down in collisionless plasmas, strong kinetic effects, or extreme small-scale reconnection physics. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) | Valid when mean free paths are short, collisions support fluid behavior, resistivity is small, spatial scales exceed kinetic scales, and flow speeds are nonrelativistic. Breaks down in collisionless plasmas, strong Hall effects, kinetic-scale reconnection, or extreme turbulence. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Plasma Physics (General) | Valid when spatial scales exceed Debye length, charge separation is negligible, collisions are rare or predictable, background fields vary slowly, and distribution functions remain close to equilibrium; breaks down in sheaths, shocks, or kinetic scale regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Space & Astrophysical Plasmas | Valid when mean free paths are long, collective effects dominate, collision rates are low, fields vary slowly, and kinetic effects are limited; breaks down at shocks, reconnection sites, or regions with strong kinetic anisotropy. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Fusion Plasma Physics | Valid when collisions are moderate, plasma is near equilibrium, axisymmetry holds, kinetic effects are secondary, and turbulence is within modeling range; breaks down in edge regimes, strong kinetic shaping, disruptions, or extreme gradients. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Computational Fluid & Plasma Physics | Valid when numerical resolution captures relevant physical scales, simplifications do not remove dominant physics, turbulence models remain stable, and kinetic effects are properly represented or negligible. Breaks down when resolution is insufficient or omitted physics becomes dominant. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Non-Newtonian & Complex Fluids | Valid when microstructure evolves smoothly, deformation rates remain within model limits, particle interactions are moderate, and temperature effects are negligible; breaks down for extreme shear, rapid transitions, strong particle aggregation, or flow-induced fractures. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | High-Energy-Density Physics (HEDP) | Valid when compression is moderate, gradients are smooth, radiation spectra are broad, and degeneracy or strong-coupling effects are limited; breaks down in ultra-dense, strongly correlated, quantum-dominated, or ultrafast regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Biophysics | Valid when microscopic details are not dominant, when biochemical networks evolve slowly relative to molecular fluctuations, when elasticity remains in linear regimes, or when stochastic noise does not dominate signaling; breaks down in highly nonlinear, strongly fluctuating, or single molecule regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Medical Physics | Valid when tissues are approximately uniform, when motion artifacts are minimal, when radiation interactions are dominated by known processes, when dose gradients are smooth, and when simplified patient geometry remains acceptable. Breaks down in highly heterogeneous tissue, rapid motion, extreme dose gradients, or unusual radiobiological conditions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Geophysics | Valid when lateral variations are small, when deformation is slow, when Earth layers behave approximately elastically or viscously, or when wave frequencies fall within ranges where approximations hold; breaks down in strongly heterogeneous, nonlinear, or rapidly changing environments. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Optics & Photonics | Valid when beam angles are small, intensities remain below nonlinear thresholds, material dispersion is weak, coherence remains stable, and quantum fluctuations are negligible. Breaks down with strong focusing, nonlinear processes, ultrashort pulses, scattering media, or quantum light sources. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Computational Physics | Valid when numerical resolution captures key physics, approximated interactions remain dominant, discretization errors stay controlled, solver stability holds, and omitted physics does not significantly alter system behavior. Breaks down when resolution is too low, when strongly nonlinear or quantum effects dominate, or when boundary conditions distort the solution. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Engineering Physics | Valid when geometries are moderate, loads are small, materials remain within elastic limits, frequencies remain in linear bands, fluid flow is not strongly turbulent, and thermal gradients are mild. Breaks down under high strain, nonlinear materials, complex boundary interactions, turbulence, and quantum-dominated regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Chemical Physics | Valid when electronic–nuclear separability holds, molecular vibrations remain near equilibrium, interactions are weak, collisions are binary, and quantum effects are moderate. Breaks down for strong coupling, high anharmonicity, ultrafast nonadiabatic events, and dense condensed-phase reactions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Environmental & Climate Physics | Valid when vertical accelerations are small, radiation spectra can be approximated in bands, turbulence closure assumptions hold, and cloud processes average out over large scales. Breaks down in localized severe weather, deep convection, highly heterogeneous terrain, or when nonlinear feedbacks dominate. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Applied Materials Physics | Valid when material is near equilibrium, microstructure is uniform, strain is small, defects are low, fields are moderate, and temperature variations are limited. Breaks down for large strain, high defect densities, strong field effects, nanoscale confinement regimes, or high-temperature phase transitions. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Quantum Chemistry | Break down under strong correlation, non-adiabatic effects, or electron–nuclear coupling. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Statistical Mechanics | Hold for sufficiently large ensembles, weak coupling, long timescales, or equilibrium conditions; break down for small systems or strong correlations. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Thermodynamics | Idealizations hold for weak interactions, slow processes, dilute systems, or near-equilibrium conditions; break down in rapid or strongly coupled regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Kinetics & Reaction Dynamics | Valid at appropriate temperature ranges, dilute limits, weak coupling, or when intermediate lifetimes justify steady-state or pre-equilibrium approximations. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Spectroscopy | Valid for weak excitation, isolated transitions, well-resolved levels, steady-state conditions; breaks down under strong coupling, ultrafast dynamics, or complex continua. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Electrochemistry | Hold under slow scan rates, low currents, dilute electrolytes, ideal electrodes; break down under strong coupling, high overpotentials, concentrated solutions, or rough surfaces. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Surface & Interface Science | Apply when roughness is minimal, interactions weak, temperature stable, adsorbate coverage low; break down with strong coupling, reconstruction, or complex multi-layer systems. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Colloid & Solution Chemistry | Hold in dilute regimes, low ionic strength, weak interactions, stable colloids; break down in concentrated solutions, aggregated systems, or strongly interacting regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Chemical Physics | Apply under weak coupling, low excitation, separable motions, dilute gases, or near-adiabatic limits; fail under strong fields, ultrafast dynamics, or conical intersections. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Structural & Mechanistic Organic Chemistry | Hold when orbital interactions dominate behavior, when solvent effects are moderate, when stereoelectronic assumptions apply; break down in highly polar, ionic, or complex environments. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Stereochemistry & Conformational Analysis | Valid for flexible molecules in low-interaction environments, small substituents, moderate temperatures; break down with rigid frameworks, strong steric/electronic effects, or constrained systems. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Synthetic Organic Chemistry | Hold under controlled lab conditions, moderate complexity, predictable reactivity patterns; break down with complex multifunctional systems, competing pathways, or highly reactive species. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Physical Organic Chemistry | Hold under consistent substituent series, moderate solvent effects, clear rate-determining steps; break down under multistep kinetics, strong solvation, or mechanistic ambiguity. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Organometallic Organic Chemistry | Hold under well-behaved ligands, moderate temperatures, established coordination geometries; break down with high catalyst loading, exotic metals, strong-field distortions, or off-cycle chemistry. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Polymer Chemistry (Carbon-based) | Hold at low conversion, dilute solution, high chain mobility, or ideal solvent conditions; break down in concentrated phases, high molecular weight, diffusion-limited regimes, or heavily branched systems. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Bioorganic Chemistry | Valid under controlled biological or biomimetic conditions; break down in crowded environments, highly dynamic conformational states, multi-enzyme coupling, or extreme ionic/thermal regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Natural Products Chemistry | Hold in purified enzymatic systems, stable isolates, moderate pH ranges; break down in vivo under competing pathways, regulatory complexity, cofactor limitations, or dynamic metabolite pools. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Medicinal Chemistry | Hold in controlled in vitro systems; break down in vivo where metabolism, protein binding, off-target effects, conformational ensembles, and nonlinear pharmacokinetics dominate. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | Main-Group Chemistry | Valid for well-behaved s/p-block compounds under typical conditions; break down for hypervalent structures, 3-center bonds, relativistic effects (heavy p-block), or strong ionic–covalent mixing. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | Transition-Metal Chemistry | Adequate for well-behaved complexes; break down under strong-field splitting, relativistic effects (late TMs), multiple oxidation states, fluxionality, spin crossover, and non-innocent ligands. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | f-Block Chemistry | Valid for most lanthanides; breaks down for actinides where 5f orbitals participate in bonding, for strongly covalent ligands, and in low-symmetry or highly relativistic regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | Coordination Chemistry | Valid for rigid complexes and classic Werner-type chemistry; break down for fluxional species, soft metals, strong π-acceptor ligands, low-symmetry fields, solvent-coordination competition, or highly covalent complexes. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | Solid-State Chemistry | Valid for ideal crystals or bulk materials; break down in nanomaterials, highly defective solids, strongly correlated systems, amorphous materials, high-temperature anharmonic regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Analytical Chemistry | Qualitative Analysis | Hold in clean matrices and controlled environments; break down with complex mixtures, overlapping spectra, interfering ions, trace-level species, or unstable analytes. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Analytical Chemistry | Quantitative Analysis | Hold in controlled systems with clean matrices; break down when nonlinear response, matrix suppression, instrument drift, side reactions, or environmental instability dominate. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Analytical Chemistry | Separation Science | Valid under optimized method conditions and clean matrices; break down in overloaded columns, complex sample matrices, turbulent flow regimes, strong adsorption, non-ideal diffusion, temperature variability. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Analytical Chemistry | Instrumental Analysis | Valid for well-calibrated, stable instruments; break down when drift, matrix suppression, detector saturation, nonlinear response, temperature/pressure fluctuations, or interfering species dominate. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Structural Biochemistry | Valid for stable, well-folded proteins or nucleic acids; breaks down with intrinsically disordered regions, multistate folding landscapes, large conformational transitions, or strong solvent coupling. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Enzymology | Valid under controlled conditions (constant enzyme, moderate substrate), simple mechanisms; break down in multi-step reactions, strong allostery, cooperativity, high substrate turnover, enzyme instability, or complex cellular environments. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Metabolism & Bioenergetics | Valid for moderate flux, stable physiology, isolated pathway analysis; breaks down in rapid transitions, dynamic stress, compartment-specific gradients, allosteric complexity, or non-equilibrium bursts. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Molecular Biology & Gene Expression | Valid in controlled systems with isolated genes or purified components; break down in complex chromatin, multi-enhancer regulation, RNA processing diversity, cellular stress responses, or stochastic low-copy regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Cellular Biochemistry | Valid in moderately stable steady states; break down during rapid signaling, stress, differentiation, apoptosis, organelle remodeling, extreme crowding, and local microdomain-specific biochemistry. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Membrane Biochemistry | Valid for simplified model membranes or purified proteins; breaks down in crowded cellular membranes, asymmetrical leaflets, strong curvature, raft microdomains, high protein density, or rapid trafficking states. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Protein Chemistry | Valid for small, stable, well-folded proteins under defined conditions; breaks down for intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs), membrane proteins, large complexes, aggregation-prone proteins, or crowded cellular environments. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Biochemical Genetics | Valid for strong-effect mutations, isolated metabolic blocks, Mendelian disorders; breaks down for polygenic traits, network-level compensation, regulatory mutations with context dependence, or environmentally modulated phenotypes. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Mineralogy & Crystallography | Valid for pure crystals at equilibrium or low-defect conditions; break down in real geological samples with zoning, inclusions, strain, metamictization, rapid cooling, or strong compositional heterogeneity. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Petrology | Valid in slowly cooled deep crust, high-temperature equilibrium contexts, simple mineral systems; breaks down in rapidly quenched rocks, open-system metasomatism, kinetic inhibition, deformation-driven metamorphism, zoned minerals. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Structural Geology & Tectonics | Valid for first-order approximations, large-scale plate kinematics, simple brittle faults, uniform stress fields; breaks down in heterogeneous rocks, high-strain shear zones, anisotropic fabrics, variable rheologies, and multi-phase deformation. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Sedimentology & Stratigraphy | Valid for idealized environments or first-order models; breaks down in rapidly changing systems, storm-dominated shelves, tectonically active basins, mixed siliciclastic-carbonate settings, intense bioturbation, or highly variable flows. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Geomorphology | Valid for long-term average behavior or simple domains; breaks down during extreme floods/storms, rapid tectonics, strong vegetation effects, heterogeneous lithology, spatially variable climate, and highly transient processes. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Geophysics | Valid for large-scale averages, first-order interpretations, small-strain elastic responses; breaks down near faults, melts, fluids, highly anisotropic rocks, strongly heterogeneous crust, or dynamic nonlinear deformation. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Geochemistry | Valid for dilute systems, slow-changing environments, high-temperature equilibrium, simple mineral–fluid systems; breaks down in concentrated brines, kinetic regimes, multi-component fluids, biological mediation, rapid transients, heterogeneous materials. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Paleontology | Valid under slow sedimentation, low reworking, chemically stable environments, well-preserved fossil assemblages; breaks down in high-energy settings, heavy bioturbation, diagenetic alteration, long hiatuses, or biased fossilization regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Hydrogeology | Valid in simple porous media or steady-flow conditions; breaks down in karst systems, fractured rocks, highly heterogeneous media, transient recharge, density-driven flow, reactive transport, and complex pumping/injection scenarios. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Economic & Applied Geology | Valid in early assessments or first-order models; breaks down in heterogeneous deposits, complex structural settings, multiphase flow, reactive transport, faulted reservoirs, supergene overprints, and irregular ore geometries. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Dynamic Meteorology | Idealizations hold under large-scale, slowly varying, low-vertical-acceleration regimes; break down in deep convection, strong turbulence, near the surface, or in rapidly evolving mesoscale systems. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Thermodynamic Meteorology | Idealizations hold when vertical accelerations are limited, condensation is well-approximated by bulk processes, radiative and turbulent fluxes behave smoothly, and microphysics do not dominate. Breakdown occurs in deep convection, strong turbulence, or mixed-phase cloud regimes. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Cloud Physics & Microphysics | These hold when particle populations are statistically homogeneous, turbulence is unresolved but parameterizable, and bulk properties approximate real microphysics. Breaks down in highly turbulent clouds, mixed-phase transitions, or detailed crystal habit evolution. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Synoptic & Mesoscale Meteorology | Valid when horizontal scales exceed a few kilometers and vertical accelerations are moderate; breakdown occurs in deep convection, tornadic vortices, or rapidly evolving boundary-layer structures where nonhydrostatic dynamics dominate. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Atmospheric Physics & Chemistry | Hold when chemical lifetimes are long relative to transport times, when aerosol populations are statistically representative, when radiation is spectrally smooth, and when reactions follow approximate steady-state. Breakdowns occur in polluted plumes, intense photochemical environments, volcanic eruptions, heterogeneous chemistry, and strong optical gradients. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Climatology & Climate Dynamics | Valid for large-scale, long-term averages where internal variability smooths short-term noise; breaks down in extreme events, abrupt climate shifts, nonlinear feedback cascades, and poorly constrained paleo intervals. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Oceanography | Physical Oceanography | Valid for large-scale and moderate-frequency motions; breaks down for strong turbulence, breaking waves, convection, near-surface mixing, bottom boundary layers, nonlinear internal-wave interactions, and small-scale processes. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Oceanography | Chemical Oceanography | Valid in well-mixed or deep-ocean settings; breaks down in coastal zones, redox transition layers, hydrothermal vents, strong biological uptake zones, highly variable freshwater inputs, and reactive particle-rich environments. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Oceanography | Biological Oceanography | Valid in broad regional averages or stable oceanic gyres; breaks down in coastal zones, upwelling regions, OMZs, bloom events, high-variability ecosystems, strong top-down control, and non-steady-state dynamics. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Oceanography | Geological Oceanography | Valid for large-scale reconstructions or deep-ocean settings; breaks down in active margins, rapidly changing depositional systems, high bioturbation zones, episodic events (turbidity currents), and hydrothermal alteration zones. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Nucleic Acid Biology | Idealizations break down when sequence context alters geometry, RNA forms complex tertiary folds, chromatin compaction restricts access, or enzyme kinetics shift under crowding or stress. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Gene Regulation & Epigenetics | Simplifications break when marks interact combinatorially, when 3D structure dominates regulation, under strong developmental or stress conditions, or when factor binding is highly cooperative or context-dependent. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Protein Biology | Idealizations fail when proteins exhibit complex folding pathways, multiple conformers, allosteric heterogeneity, crowding-dependent behavior, or when PTMs influence structure/function combinatorially. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Molecular Complexes & Information Flow | Simplifications fail when complexes undergo rapid conformational switching, exhibit multi-level cooperativity, display heterogeneous subunit composition, form transient assemblies, or behave differently under active-cellular-crowding conditions. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Molecular Methods & Technologies | Simplifications fail when instruments drift, reactions exhibit nonlinear behavior, samples vary in quality, noise becomes non-negligible, or multiparameter interactions influence assay performance. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Structure & Organelles | Break down when nanoscale heterogeneity, membrane microdomains, stochastic traffic noise, or pathological alterations distort structure or function. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cellular Dynamics & Trafficking | Breaks down when crowding effects dominate, when track geometry is irregular, when membrane heterogeneity alters budding/fusion, or when stochastic fluctuations overwhelm deterministic models (e.g., sparse cargo, low motor copy number). |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Signaling & Communication | Idealizations break down when signaling is highly nonlinear, when spatial microdomains dominate behavior, when stochastic noise is large (low molecule counts), when receptor clustering or scaffolding strongly affects outcome. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Cycle, Fate & Death | Idealizations fail when transitions are graded rather than discrete, when chromatin or transcription states are highly heterogeneous, when non-canonical death pathways dominate, or when signaling noise heavily influences lineage decisions. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Interactions & Microenvironment | Breaks down in highly heterogeneous tissues, in stiff/fibrotic microenvironments, under rapid ECM remodeling, during inflammation or tumor invasion, or when local gradients are nonlinear or unstable. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Morphology & Motility | Breaks down when cells exhibit highly irregular shapes, switch motility modes, undergo rapid polarity changes, experience spatially heterogeneous environments, or when filament networks behave strongly nonlinearly. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Classical & Transmission Genetics | Breakdown occurs with strong epistasis, environmental modulation, linkage interference, recombination hotspots, meiotic abnormalities, or small/nonrandom mating populations. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Population Genetics | Idealizations fail with finite or fluctuating population sizes, strong selection, nonrandom mating, significant structure or migration barriers, overlapping generations, strong LD, or complex demography. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Quantitative Genetics | These assumptions fail under strong epistasis, major-effect loci, G×E interactions, shifting environments, unstable G-matrices, non-linear genotype–phenotype maps, or when selection changes variance structure. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Genomic Evolution & Comparative Genomics | Breaks down under rate heterogeneity, episodic selection, varying recombination landscapes, genome structural bursts, horizontal gene transfer, rapid genome-size shifts, or when substitution processes strongly deviate from simple models. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Phylogenetics & Systematics | Breakdown occurs with strong reticulation (hybridization, introgression), high homoplasy, rapid radiations with little signal, deep-time saturation, conflicting gene trees, or when morphological homology is uncertain. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Macroevolution & Speciation Theory | Idealizations fail under variable diversification dynamics, reticulate evolution, hybrid speciation, rapid environmental turnover, incomplete lineage sorting, cryptic species diversity, or high morphological convergence. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Cellular & Tissue Physiology | Simplifications fail during nonlinear mechanical deformation, complex multi-ion coupling, heterogeneous tissue architecture, rapid dynamic signaling, or pathological structural changes. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Neurophysiology | Idealizations fail during complex dendritic integration, pathological ion imbalance, nonlinear bursting, neuromodulation-driven state shifts, fast network oscillations, or high-dimensional circuit behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Endocrine & Regulatory Physiology | Simplifications fail under complex multi-hormone interactions, receptor desensitization, nonlinear feedback dynamics, stress-induced state changes, or pathological endocrine disorders. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Cardiovascular & Respiratory Physiology | Idealizations fail under turbulent flow, heart failure, vascular disease, heterogeneous lung pathology, high-altitude physiology, shunts, or extreme autonomic modulation. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Metabolic & Energetic Physiology | Simplifications fail during rapid metabolic transitions, exercise, temperature stress, hormonal surges, nutrient depletion, disease states, or nonlinear multi-pathway competition. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Renal, Fluid & Homeostatic Physiology | Idealizations fail under extreme fluid loss, severe acidosis/alkalosis, renal pathology, disrupted medullary gradients, hormonal dysregulation, or highly heterogeneous nephron behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Cell Fate & Lineage Specification | Breaks down when fate decisions involve graded, stochastic, or reversible processes; under heterogeneous microenvironments; when mechanical cues shape fate; in lineages with complex feedback; or when epigenetic landscapes change dynamically. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Pattern Formation & Embryonic Axes | Fail under high tissue heterogeneity, dynamic embryo geometry, strong noise, irregular morphogen sources, mechanical feedback on patterning, or species with non-canonical pattern mechanisms. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Morphogenesis & Tissue-Level Mechanics | Fail in highly heterogeneous tissues, during rapid cytoskeletal turnover, in strongly nonlinear viscoelastic regimes, in tissues with complex topology (e.g., branching organs), or where discrete cell behaviors dominate over continuum approximations. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Organogenesis & Multi-Tissue Assembly | Fail in heterogeneous or asymmetrical organs, tissues with strong regional specialization, organs shaped by stochastic branching, systems with significant ECM anisotropy, or cases requiring precise cell-level detail to capture multi-tissue behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Growth, Timing, Regeneration & Life-Cycle Transitions | Fail under strong tissue heterogeneity, incomplete regeneration, species-specific timing programs, metabolic instability, environmental perturbation, or gradual life-cycle transitions that violate sharp staging assumptions. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Evolutionary Development (Evo–Devo) | Fail with strongly interconnected GRNs, complex epistatic regulatory evolution, species with extreme plasticity, developmental systems with non-modular organization, or traits influenced by nonlinear feedback processes. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Organismal Ecology | Simplifications fail under extreme environments, complex predator–prey pressures, highly heterogeneous microhabitats, strong behavioral learning effects, or organisms with flexible/mixed strategies. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Population Ecology | Simplifications fail with strong individual heterogeneity, fluctuating environments, spatial fragmentation, stochastic events, complex density dependence, or strong interspecific interactions. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Community Ecology | Idealizations break under strong trait differentiation, complex indirect effects, spatial heterogeneity, temporal variability, multi-trophic feedbacks, or strong environmental filtering. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Ecosystem Ecology | Simplifications fail under strong temporal variability, spatial heterogeneity, extreme disturbances, nonlinear feedbacks, or context-dependent recycling processes. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Landscape & Spatial Ecology | Simplifications fail with high spatial complexity, strong directional dispersal, species with specialized movement behaviors, heterogeneous barriers, complex land-use mosaics, or spatially coupled processes. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Global Ecology & Earth-System Interactions | Simplifications fail under nonlinear tipping-point dynamics, abrupt climate shifts, highly heterogeneous regional effects, extreme disturbances, or strong coupling across scales. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Proof Calculi | Break down in substructural logics (no contraction/weakening), relevance logics, resource-sensitive calculi, or systems with restricted rule forms. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Structural Proof Theory | Idealizations break down in substructural logics (linear, relevant, ordered), systems without contraction/weakening, modal calculi with non-local rules, logics lacking global normalization. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Proof Theory of Non-Classical Logics | Idealizations break down in logics with non-well-behaved modalities, nonlocal structural behavior, nonterminating normalization, unrestricted resource usage, or logics where analytic calculi cannot be recovered. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Ordinal & Strength Analysis | Idealizations break down when analyzing very large ordinals, non-wellfounded behavior, incomplete collapsing systems, or when ordinal notations require fine-grained distinctions beyond simplified representations. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Proof Complexity | Break down when proofs require non-standard representations, when non-CNF forms are essential, when asymptotic abstractions mask critical behavior, or in systems where resource measures interact in non-linear ways (space vs. width). |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Automated & Interactive Reasoning | Break down when heuristics fail on adversarial inputs, when constraint languages require expressiveness beyond solver support, when interactive proofs rely on noncanonical tactics, or when abstractions hide crucial structural information. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Structures, Languages & Interpretations | Break down with higher-order semantics, infinitary languages, ultraproduct anomalies, category-theoretic semantics, or failures of definability or compactness assumptions. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Satisfaction & Definability Theory | Break down under higher-order logic, infinitary languages, ambiguous semantics, non-standard models, or definability gaps caused by compactness/expressiveness limits. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Quantifier Theory & Model Completeness | Breakdown occurs with infinitary languages, higher-order quantifiers, ambiguous scopes, non-elementary embeddings, or theories lacking compactness needed for quantifier-elimination theorems. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Classification Theory | Failures occur in unstable theories (SOP, TP), non-elementary classes, insufficient saturation, or when independence is non-symmetric or not well-defined. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Tame / O-Minimal Model Theory | Break down in non-o-minimal expansions, structures with dense independent sets, pathological definable sets, or when saturation and definable completeness fail. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Axiomatic Foundations & Cumulative Hierarchy | Break down in non-well-founded set theories, anti-foundation axioms, class-sized constructions beyond ZFC, or models that violate Replacement or Power Set. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Constructibility & Inner Models | Break down in the presence of large cardinals beyond the scope of a given core model, in non-standard models of arithmetic, or in settings where definability fails to produce a well-behaved hierarchy. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Large Cardinal Theory | Break down in models lacking choice, in non-well-founded foundations, under inconsistent large-cardinal hypotheses, or when extender iterability fails. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Forcing & Independence Theory | Fail in non-well-founded settings, in models without Choice, when chain-condition assumptions collapse, or when forcing destroys structure required for definability or absoluteness. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Descriptive Set Theory | Break down when choice is too strong (destroying regularity), when determinacy is absent at higher levels, in non-Polish spaces, or in models without appropriate regularity properties. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Computability Theory | Models of Computation & Recursive Function Theory | Break down when physical constraints matter (finite memory), when non-standard computational paradigms are introduced (quantum, analog), when reductions require infinite parallelism, or when recursion assumptions fail for partial functions. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Computability Theory | Recursively Enumerable (r.e.) Sets & Degrees | Break down when dealing with non-r.e. sets, higher recursion hierarchies, priority constructions requiring non-effective injury handling, reducibilities beyond Turing/tt/m-reducibility, or contexts where uniform enumeration breaks down. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Computability Theory | Reducibility & Degrees of Unsolvability | Fail for non-effectively presented sets, higher-type domains, reducibilities not transitive/closed, encoding-sensitive anomalies, or contexts requiring semantic rather than syntactic comparisons. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Computability Theory | Arithmetical & Analytical Hierarchies | Break down under nonstandard models of arithmetic, exotic encodings, higher-type recursion, large-cardinal assumptions, or when determinacy axioms collapse definability hierarchies. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Group Theory | Breakdown occurs when analytic/topological properties are essential (Lie groups, p-adic groups); when finite presentations fail to capture infinite complexity; when ignoring torsion, topology, or geometry invalidates structural theorems. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Ring Theory | Breakdown occurs in non-Noetherian rings (loss of finiteness properties), highly pathological ideals, noncommutative rings where standard intuition fails, rings without identity (different homomorphism behavior), or when geometric/topological structure is essential. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Field Theory | Break down in inseparable or wildly ramified extensions; in positive characteristic pathologies; in infinite algebraic closures requiring cardinality considerations; when ignoring topological or valuation-theoretic structure for local fields. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Module Theory | Break down over non-PID or non-Noetherian rings; decomposition may fail; rank may not exist; free resolutions may not terminate; torsion phenomena may dominate; scalar actions become non-symmetric in noncommutative settings. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Linear Algebra | Break down in infinite-dimensional settings; numerical instability affects orthogonality; non-diagonalizability requires Jordan form; approximate methods fail for ill-conditioned systems; exact arithmetic assumptions break in floating-point. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Representation Theory | Fail in non-semisimple algebras; infinite-dimensional representations with analytic subtleties; non-compact groups lacking complete reducibility; modular representation theory where usual character theory breaks down; wild representation types. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Universal Algebra | Fail in infinitary settings; multi-sorted interactions may break simplifications; non-equational theories exceed the framework; congruence lattices may fail to be manageable; some algebraic structures resist classification via equational reasoning alone. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Algebraic Combinatorics | Fail in infinite-dimensional representation settings; breakdown in non-crystallographic or wild-type Coxeter groups; failure of positivity assumptions; pathological graph spectra; non-Schur-positive symmetric functions; growth beyond computational tractability. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Real Analysis | Simplifications fail for fractal sets, non-measurable sets, nowhere-differentiable functions, unbounded domains, divergent series, or functions requiring Lebesgue integration; ε–δ reasoning breaks down for discontinuous paths or non-metric spaces. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Complex Analysis | Simplifications fail for multiply connected regions; essential singularities; pathological boundary behavior; multivalued analytic continuation; several complex variables requiring deeper machinery; functions without power-series representations. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Functional Analysis | Fail for unbounded or densely defined operators; nonseparable spaces; incomplete normed spaces; lack of orthonormal bases in general Banach spaces; non-compact operators; irregular domains in PDE frameworks; failure of reflexivity or Hahn–Banach applicability. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Harmonic Analysis | Fail in non-Abelian/non-compact groups; breakdown for non-summable Fourier series; divergence at discontinuities; pathological Lᵖ behaviors (e.g., Carleson phenomenon); distributions requiring tempered frameworks; singular integrals failing boundedness on some Lᵖ; wavelet systems requiring additional structure. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Differential Equations (ODE/PDE) | Break down for strong nonlinearity; shocks or discontinuities; rough domains or coefficients; chaotic regimes; singularity formation; solutions outside classical regularity; high-dimensional blow-up; PDEs requiring distributional or measure-valued solutions. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Differential Geometry | Break down near singularities, on non-smooth spaces, in metric-degenerate regions, for manifolds without compatible atlases, or at topological obstructions to global smooth structures. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Algebraic Geometry | Break down in positive characteristic pathologies, non-Noetherian rings, wild singularities, non-separated schemes, or when cohomological finiteness fails. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Metric Geometry | Break down in incomplete spaces, fractal or highly irregular spaces, metric spaces lacking geodesics, spaces without triangle-comparison validity, or in non-doubling or non-proper contexts. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Point-Set Topology | Break down for non-Hausdorff spaces, non-regular spaces, wild quotients, non-first-countable spaces, or spaces lacking standard convergence behavior. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Homotopy Theory | Break down for arbitrary wild spaces, non-Hausdorff or non-locally contractible spaces, failure of lifting properties, unstable phenomena outside stable range, missing CW-approximations. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Knot Theory | Breakdown for wild knots; failure of smooth/PL approximations; ambiguity in diagrams with nondistinct crossings; invalidity when considering physical/energetic constraints instead of topological isotopy. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Elementary Number Theory | Breakdown in non-UFD rings; limitations in detecting large prime factors; failure of simple modular tools for higher Diophantine problems; difficulty with huge moduli or computationally hard factorizations. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Algebraic Number Theory | Breakdowns occur in non-Dedekind domains, wild ramification, large discriminants, non-UFD behavior, infinite extensions, or settings requiring analytic or transcendental tools. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Analytic Number Theory | Break down for small x or short intervals; invalid near poles/critical zeros; unreliable without uniform control of error terms; analytic continuation may fail beyond certain regions; conditional results depend on unproven hypotheses (e.g., RH, GRH). |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Arithmetic Geometry | Break down for wild ramification, bad reduction, higher-dimensional pathologies, singularities, non-rational varieties, or when heights behave irregularly; failure of local–global principles. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Modular and Automorphic Forms | Breakdowns occur for nonholomorphic forms, non-arithmetic groups, higher-rank groups with complicated spectra, lack of cuspidality, non-tempered representations, or when analytic continuation fails for certain L-functions. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Transcendental Number Theory | Break down when algebraic numbers satisfy near-relations; auxiliary constructions fail to vanish at desired orders; approximation bounds too weak; nonzero linear forms approach zero too rapidly; heights grow beyond manageable levels. |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Human Evolutionary Anthropology | Break down with incomplete fossil records; rapid environmental change; hybridization between hominin groups; strong genetic drift; mosaic evolution; plastic responses misinterpreted as genetic; cultural innovations rapidly changing selective contexts. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Kinship, Descent & Domestic Organization | Break down under social mobility, migration, urbanization, fluid identity categories, cross-cultural marriage, flexible or negotiable kin roles, hidden or informal kinship, crisis-driven household restructuring, adoption/fostering practices. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Ritual, Cultural Practice & Symbolic Systems | Break down when meaning is contested or fluid; during ritual innovation or syncretism; under colonial or globalization influence; when participants hold divergent interpretations; when rituals become routinized or lose symbolic force; in liminal or crisis contexts; in highly stratified societies with differentiated ritual roles. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Subsistence Systems, Environment & Human Adaptation | Break down under rapid climate change, extreme ecological patchiness, cultural specialization, social constraints on mobility, technological disruption, multi-resource economies, labor bottlenecks, domestication transitions, market entanglement, or large-scale demographic pressure. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Material Culture, Technology & Archaeological Interpretation | Break down under extensive taphonomic disturbance, reuse of artifacts, mixed stratigraphy, incomplete assemblages, overlapping cultural phases, ephemeral materials lost to decay, culturally ambiguous artifacts, or multi-functional tools that resist simple categorization. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Ethnographic Method & Comparative Analysis | Break down in highly heterogeneous communities; in contexts of rapid social change; when insider categories diverge from analytic ones; when power dynamics distort observation; when translation obscures meaning; when behaviors resist discrete coding; when cross-cultural categories lack equivalence. | |
| Social Sciences | Economics | Choice (Microeconomic Foundations) | Break down under bounded rationality, non-convexities, behavioral deviations, incomplete information, liquidity constraints, time inconsistency, Knightian uncertainty, non-differentiability, discontinuities, habit formation. | |
| Social Sciences | Economics | Interaction (Markets, Strategy & Mechanisms) | Fail under bounded rationality, behavioral biases, incomplete information, liquidity frictions, network effects, non-convexities, coordination failures, thin markets, complementarities, collusion, repeated interaction with path dependence, institutional rigidities. | |
| Social Sciences | Economics | Aggregation & Dynamics (Macroeconomic Systems) | Break down with heterogeneous agents, liquidity traps, financial crises, non-linearities (large shocks), bounded rationality, persistent unemployment, sticky wages/prices, credit constraints, zero-lower-bound environments, or structural breaks in productivity/policy. | |
| Social Sciences | Geography (Human) | Spatial Patterns & Spatial Analysis | Break down in heterogeneous or topographically complex environments; under infrastructural irregularities; where data is sparse/biased; in multi-scale phenomena; during rapid spatial restructuring (urbanization, disaster, migration waves); where administrative boundaries distort functional geography. | |
| Social Sciences | Geography (Human) | Mobility, Flows & Connectivity | Break down in highly fragmented infrastructure; under political borders, conflict, or regulation; in multimodal or time-dependent networks; during disruptions (disasters, strikes, pandemics); under strong social or cultural mobility constraints; when flows are irregular, stochastic, or sparse; where data gaps distort actual movement patterns. | |
| Social Sciences | Geography (Human) | Human–Environment Interaction & Landscape Modification | Break down in rapidly changing or highly complex landscapes; under strong cultural heterogeneity; during climate extremes or abrupt disturbances; where feedback loops are nonlinear; when informal or unrecorded land uses dominate; in highly fragmented or degraded ecosystems; in colonial/postcolonial contexts with layered land claims. | |
| Social Sciences | Geography (Human) | Place, Territory & Spatial Experience | Break down in multicultural or contested settings; during rapid sociopolitical change; where displacement or trauma alters spatial experience; in highly mobile populations; when symbolic landscapes fragment; when boundaries are fluid or performative; where power asymmetries distort place-making. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Phonetics & Phonology | Break downs in casual speech, high-coarticulation languages, tonal crowding, prosodic irregularity, pathological speech, multilingual phonological interaction, or when acoustic environments distort formant structure. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Morphology | Breakdown occurs with suppletion, irregular morphology, gradient morphological productivity, extensive morphophonology, mixed morphological typologies, or contact-induced morphological change. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Syntax | Breakdowns occur in performance-heavy contexts, multilingual interference, contact-induced syntactic variation, gradient grammaticality, constructions with mixed categories, or languages with weak constituency signals. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Semantics | Breakdowns occur with ambiguity, vagueness, metaphor, context-dependence, pragmatic enrichment, indexicals, cross-linguistic variation in meaning categories, or constructions with underspecified interpretation. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Pragmatics | Breakdowns occur with deception, irony, sarcasm, cultural mismatch, ambiguous reference, shifting discourse goals, incomplete common ground, non-cooperative behavior, or emotionally charged communication. | |
| Social Sciences | Political Science | Political Institutions & Formal Political Order | Break down in high-corruption states; hybrid regimes; informal power networks; weak judiciaries; unstable constitutions; authoritarian consolidation; bureaucratic decay; institutional capture; crises with rapid rule changes; factional fragmentation; external intervention. | |
| Social Sciences | Political Science | Political Behavior, Mobilization & Collective Action | Break down under misinformation, propaganda, emotional activation, heterogeneous identities, network fragmentation, fear/coercion, dynamic preference change, resource scarcity, repression, non-linear thresholds, conflict escalation, decentralized leaderless movements. | |
| Social Sciences | Political Science | Governance, Policy Formation & State Capacity | Break down under corruption, patronage, political interference, fragmented bureaucracies, poor monitoring, low administrative professionalism, fiscal crises, institutional erosion, conflicting mandates, governance under authoritarian or hybrid regimes, crisis-driven improvisation. | |
| Social Sciences | Political Science | International Relations & Global Order | Break down when domestic politics shapes foreign policy; informational asymmetry; misperceptions; alliance ambiguity; state fragmentation; non-state actors exerting major influence; economic shocks; leadership changes; hidden capabilities; hybrid warfare; contested sovereignty. | |
| Social Sciences | Psychology | Cognitive Processes & Mental Architecture | Breakdown occurs in high-stress contexts, emotional interference, pathological cognitive states, cross-cultural meaning variation, multitasking environments, or when representational assumptions fail (e.g., ambiguous stimuli). | |
| Social Sciences | Psychology | Learning, Conditioning & Behavioral Mechanisms | Breakdown occurs in complex environments, shifting motivations, multi-cue contexts, cognitive reinterpretation of stimuli, social learning influences, or when reinforcement loses meaning (e.g., satiation). | |
| Social Sciences | Psychology | Emotion, Motivation & Affect Regulation | Break down under trauma, chronic stress, psychiatric conditions, strong cultural modulation, multitasking environments, emotion–cognition entanglement, or when physiological signals lack clear mapping to subjective experience. | |
| Social Sciences | Psychology | Development, Individual Differences & Psychometrics | Break down with cultural/linguistic bias, nonlinear development, dramatic environmental disruption, atypical neurocognitive profiles, poorly calibrated measures, or multidimensional constructs forced into simple models. | |
| Social Sciences | Sociology | Social Interaction Mechanisms | Break down in high-conflict settings, cross-cultural encounters, severe power asymmetries, interactions under deception, institutional breakdown, or environments with ambiguous/shared meanings. | |
| Social Sciences | Sociology | Social Structure Mechanisms | Break down in fluid or rapidly changing societies; informal organizations; hybrid or decentralized institutions; intersectional or multidimensional stratification systems; contexts of institutional failure or weak rule enforcement. | |
| Social Sciences | Sociology | Social Network & Relational Dynamics | Breakdowns in fast-changing networks; hidden ties; multiplex or overlapping relational layers; high-degree missing data; contexts with extreme relational volatility; algorithmic misclassification of ties. |