This section identifies the unstated but indispensable assumptions that each field relies on for its theories and models to make sense, even though they are rarely spelled out explicitly. These implicit commitments include things like trusting that core formalisms (e.g., Hilbert spaces, band theory, Darcy’s law, utility maximization, grammatical structure, institutional rules) actually correspond to the real systems being studied; that measurements, categories, and idealizations map coherently onto the world; and that the chosen abstractions (particles, quasiparticles, agents, institutions, networks, cultures, traits) are stable enough to support generalization. By making these hidden commitments explicit, this row shows how each discipline’s conceptual structure depends on background beliefs about representation, measurement, and the applicability of its own core models.
Science Analysis Template
Below are the results of cycles 1 & 2 of The Science Project
Across the template, the “Implicit Commitments” row shows that each field quietly relies on a set of background beliefs that are not usually argued for, but are necessary for its models to be usable:
- Trust in core formalisms and representations
Most disciplines assume that their main mathematical or conceptual tools actually match reality at the working scale:- Physics trusts Hilbert spaces, field theories, band structures, and continuum PDEs.
- Chemistry and materials science trust potential energy surfaces, band theory, phase diagrams, and coarse-grained thermodynamics.
- Biology trusts that sequences, structures, networks, and pathways are stable, meaningful units.
- Social sciences trust that constructs like “preferences,” “institutions,” “identities,” “networks,” and “cultures” can be measured and treated as structured variables.
- Formal sciences trust that their abstract structures and encodings are internally consistent and adequate to support theorems about them.
- Assumptions about measurability, stability, and transferability
Fields generally assume that:- Key quantities are measurable in practice (even if approximately).
- System behavior and categories are stable enough across time and context to justify generalization.
- Relationships (laws, reaction schemes, grammars, SAR trends, demographic models) are transferable across similar systems, not unique to a single case.
- Assumptions about the adequacy of simplifications and averaging
Many domains implicitly commit to the idea that:- Coarse-graining, homogenization, or classification does not erase the phenomena of interest.
- Quasiparticles, effective media, representative agents, mean-field communities, or aggregate indices are good enough surrogates for the underlying complexity most of the time.
Taken together, these implicit commitments define the background “confidence layer” of each science: they specify what the field takes for granted about its own tools, categories, and data before any explicit assumptions or models are even written down.
| Element | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scope Category | ||||
| Sub-Item | Implicit Commitments | |||
| Science Name Link | Branch Name Link | Field Name Link | Definition | Unstated but necessary assumptions that shape the field’s conceptual structure. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Classical Mechanics | Assumes measurable quantities are continuous, systems obey Newtonian dynamics, superposition of forces is valid, and classical causality governs evolution. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Classical Electromagnetism | Assumes well-defined inertial frames, smooth macroscopic media, cleanly specified boundaries, negligible radiation reaction in most practical problems, and that different formulations (field, potential, circuit) describe the same underlying EM reality. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Classical Thermodynamics | Assumes local equilibrium for processes, continuity of material properties, measurability of temperature and pressure, and that macroscopic averages smooth out microscopic randomness. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Statistical Mechanics (Classical) | Assumes differentiable trajectories, classical forces, well-defined microstates, stable equilibrium, and that macroscopic observables result from statistical averaging, not individual particle dynamics. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Optics (Classical Wave Theory) | Assumes smooth, continuous media; stable refractive index; negligible quantum fluctuations; well-defined phase relationships; and that light–matter interactions can be treated without photon quantization. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Acoustics | Assumes smooth, continuous media; negligible molecular-scale randomness; stable temperature and pressure; no phase changes during propagation; and well-defined boundary interactions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Continuum Mechanics | Assumes smoothness of fields, negligible atomic granularity, stability of material properties, ability to define infinitesimal elements, and that constitutive relations reliably describe macroscopic behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Classical Field Theory | Assumes continuous spacetime, stable source distributions, negligible quantum effects, well-defined boundary conditions, and applicability of calculus-based field equations to physical systems. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Pre-Relativistic Frameworks | Assumes a universal time shared by all observers, a preferred rest frame (often associated with the ether), linear addition of velocities, and the absence of speed limits on causal influences. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Mechanics | Assumes well-defined Hilbert spaces, stable Hamiltonians, repeatable measurements, separation of system and observer, unitary evolution between measurements, and emergence of classical behavior through decoherence. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Relativistic Quantum Mechanics | Assumes a smooth spacetime background, well-defined mass and spin values, positive-energy physical states, stability under Lorentz transformations, and that interactions can be incorporated without requiring a full field-theoretic treatment. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Special Relativity | Assumes idealized synchronization procedures, exact invariance of the speed of light, smooth spacetime structure, and stability of inertial frames. Also assumes no influence from gravity or spacetime curvature. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | General Relativity | Assumes continuum spacetime, classical matter fields, determinism of geometric evolution, no quantum fluctuations of geometry, and validity of differential geometry for describing physical reality. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Field Theory (QFT) | Assumes continuous spacetime, absence of gravitational curvature (flat background), validity of perturbative expansions, regularization methods to control divergences, and consistent renormalization of interacting fields. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Particle Physics (High-Energy Physics) | Assumes flat spacetime, stable vacuum structure, renormalizability of interactions, well-defined detector response, and applicability of Feynman-diagram expansions for interaction probabilities. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Nuclear Physics | Assumes nuclei behave as quantized systems with well-defined energy levels, that many-body approximations are sufficient, that nuclear forces follow known symmetries, and that nuclei can be treated independently of quark-level dynamics. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Statistical Physics | Assumes existence of stable phases, well-defined ensembles, negligible decoherence on relevant timescales, validity of continuum descriptions for collective modes, and applicability of statistical averaging. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Optics | Assumes stability of quantum states, well-defined modes, negligible multi-photon losses, accurate state preparation, valid rotating-wave or dipole approximations, and meaningful separation between system and environment. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Information Science | Assumes stable quantum hardware, meaningful distinction between physical and logical qubits, defined noise channels, reliable calibration, and the validity of fault-tolerant thresholds for long computations. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | Symmetry & Group Theory | Assumes mathematical consistency of group structures, stability of conservation laws, meaningful correspondence between algebraic representations and physical states, and applicability of linear spaces for representation theory. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | Gauge Theory | Gauge symmetry is a redundancy, so only gauge-invariant quantities are observable; mathematical structures like groups and bundles are assumed adequate; spacetime dimension and signature are fixed; standard quantization methods apply. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | String Theory | Assumes mathematical structures used are physically meaningful, extra dimensions exist though hidden, supersymmetry may be present even if not observable, and dualities provide equivalent descriptions of the same physics. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | Differential Geometry in Physics | Geometry is assumed to faithfully represent physical behavior; coordinate choices do not alter physical meaning; geometric fields capture all relevant dynamical structure. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | Statistical Field Theory | Assumes universality across different microscopic systems, validity of renormalization methods, and that field-based descriptions capture essential large-scale behavior despite ignoring individual particle motion. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics | Assumes mathematical formalisms accurately represent physical systems; measurements correspond to operator rules; probability assignments are complete; and the underlying space is sufficient for all quantum descriptions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | General Mathematical Physics | Assumes mathematical consistency maps to physical consistency, transformations preserve meaning, and advanced structures such as topological or algebraic objects faithfully represent aspects of physical reality. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Solid-State Physics | Assumes that coarse-grained band structures accurately describe electron behavior, symmetry strongly constrains material properties, and quasiparticles provide valid effective descriptions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Semiconductor Physics | Assumes band theory effectively captures electron behavior, dopant effects can be treated as modifying carrier density rather than altering structure, and device-scale models faithfully represent underlying microscopic physics. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Magnetism & Spin Physics | Assumes quasiparticle descriptions (such as magnons) accurately represent collective modes, domain theory reflects real structures, and spin models reliably capture both microscopic and macroscopic behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Superconductivity | Assumes quasiparticle and pairing models accurately describe microscopic physics; assumes collective coherence persists across macroscopic regions; assumes idealized boundary conditions approximate real materials. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Soft Matter Physics | Assumes continuum or coarse-grained models capture essential behavior, thermal motion strongly influences structure, and emergent properties arise from collective interactions rather than individual particles. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Nanomaterials & Nanostructures | Assumes nanoscale models map onto measurable properties, surface energies are meaningful descriptors, and quantum confinement approximations represent real electronic behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Strongly Correlated Electron Systems | Assumes quasiparticle concepts remain partially meaningful, simplified lattice models map to real materials, and emergent order reflects underlying interactions even when microscopic details are complex. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Topological Matter | Assumes band models capture essential topological features, boundary states persist under moderate perturbation, and topological classification reflects real material behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Materials Science (Physical Perspective) | Assumes continuum descriptions are valid at larger scales, simplified models capture essential physics, phase diagrams represent real equilibrium states, and microstructure property links remain reliable. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Stellar Astrophysics | Assumes stellar models map to real observations, nuclear reaction rates are reliable, stellar atmospheres represent internal properties, and hydrostatic equilibrium holds for most of a star’s lifetime. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Galactic Astrophysics | Assumes rotation curves map to mass distribution, interstellar medium phases are well described by known physics, and stellar population models reflect real evolutionary histories. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Extragalactic Astrophysics | Assumes redshift reliably traces cosmic distance, luminosity functions represent galaxy populations, cluster scaling laws reflect gravitational physics, and halo models connect galaxies to dark matter. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Cosmology | Assumes dark matter and dark energy are meaningful constructs, cosmic expansion is accurately represented by metric theories, and cosmological parameters reliably reflect underlying physics. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | High-Energy Astrophysics | Assumes radiation mechanisms map to observed spectra, compact object models accurately reflect strong gravity behavior, and physical laws remain valid under extreme conditions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Gravitational Astrophysics | Assumes observational models map accurately to physical properties, simplified internal or atmospheric models capture essential physics, and orbital dynamics reflect real gravitational interactions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Planetary Science & Exoplanets | Assumes simplified atmospheric and interior models capture key physics, orbital dynamics reliably reflect gravitational interactions, and observable signatures such as transits or spectra map correctly onto physical parameters. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Astrochemistry & Interstellar Medium Physics | Assumes chemical abundances map to physical conditions, grain models represent real surfaces, radiation field approximations are accurate, and phase distinctions reflect real ISM structure. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Astrobiology | Assumes Earth based biochemistry provides relevant analogs, environmental parameters map to biological viability, and detectable biosignatures reflect real biological activity rather than abiotic false positives. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Fluid Dynamics | Assumes continuum approximations hold, boundary conditions adequately represent real surfaces, turbulence models approximate unresolved scales, and thermodynamic variables reflect physical states accurately. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Hydrodynamics (Ideal Fluids) | Assumes fluid closure relations approximate kinetic behavior, magnetic field lines represent physically meaningful structures, and resistive or ideal MHD approximations map real physical processes. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) | Assumes closure relations approximate kinetic physics, magnetic field lines act as meaningful physical constructs, and resistive or ideal MHD approximations map real plasma processes to usable models. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Plasma Physics (General) | Assumes model closures capture essential physics, quasi neutrality holds in bulk, field line concepts remain meaningful, and plasma waves and instabilities reflect real collective behavior rather than artifacts of simplified approximations. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Space & Astrophysical Plasmas | Assumes kinetic distributions can be approximated by fluid moments, magnetic field lines represent physical organization, and large scale astrophysical plasmas follow uniform physical laws across scales. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Fusion Plasma Physics | Assumes quasineutrality in bulk, closure models capture turbulence and transport, wall interactions can be approximated, and confinement scaling relations remain meaningful across devices. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Computational Fluid & Plasma Physics | Assumes numerical stability reflects physical stability, discretization errors remain bounded, turbulence closures remain valid outside calibration regimes, and algorithmic approximations map meaningfully to real physical behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Non-Newtonian & Complex Fluids | Assumes constitutive models are adequate surrogates for underlying physics, memory effects can be encoded in finite variables, microstructure does not change too abruptly, and bulk rheology reflects representative microscopic behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | High-Energy-Density Physics (HEDP) | Assumes EOS tables and opacity models remain valid across extreme regimes, that coupling between radiation and matter is captured by established transport formalisms, and that symmetry persists enough for reduced modeling. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Biophysics | Assumes statistical physics captures biological fluctuations, continuum mechanics can approximate cellular or tissue mechanics, coarse graining does not erase critical biological features, and molecular interactions follow consistent physical laws. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Medical Physics | Assumes calibration standards accurately map to real dose, tissue equivalence models represent patient anatomy, imaging artifacts remain manageable, and reconstructed images correspond consistently to physical structures. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Geophysics | Assumes large-scale averaging represents heterogeneous regions, rheological laws remain valid at depth, seismic noise and heterogeneity can be filtered into useful signals, and remote sensing inversion remains mathematically stable. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Optics & Photonics | Assumes materials behave consistently across wavelengths of interest, detectors respond linearly within operational limits, coherence models map accurately to real sources, and approximations like paraxiality or scalar treatment do not distort core physical predictions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Computational Physics | Assumes floating point arithmetic is sufficiently accurate, solver convergence implies physical fidelity, simplified models approximate real systems, and numerical noise does not meaningfully distort emergent dynamics. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Engineering Physics | Assumes material models apply across operational conditions, simplifications capture essential behavior, uncertainty can be bounded, and numerical or analytical models map realistically to real-world performance. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Chemical Physics | Assumes potential energy surfaces are sufficiently accurate, environmental degrees of freedom can be approximated, molecular motion is resolvable using physical coordinates, and averaging captures fluctuations. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Environmental & Climate Physics | Assumes climate systems can be discretized and parameterized, global averages are meaningful representations, models converge toward physically plausible states, and unresolved scales can be approximated using statistical or empirical closures. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Applied Materials Physics | Assumes microstructural averaging is valid, experimental measurements reflect intrinsic properties, continuum models approximate atomic systems when coarse grained, and physical properties remain stable across expected operating ranges. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Quantum Chemistry | Assumes Schrödinger dynamics, convergence of basis sets, meaningful potential surfaces, tractable electron correlation. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Statistical Mechanics | Assumes time averages approximate ensemble averages, coarse-graining is meaningful, and microscopic laws underpin macroscopic regularities. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Thermodynamics | Assumes additivity of extensive variables, ergodicity justifying equilibrium, and meaningful coarse-graining. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Kinetics & Reaction Dynamics | Assumes molecular randomness, adequate sampling of collisions, meaningful reaction coordinates, smooth energy landscapes. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Spectroscopy | Assumes spectroscopic signals reflect underlying state populations, transitions obey quantum rules, and perturbations are interpretable through standard models. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Electrochemistry | Assumes ion solvation is describable, electrode surfaces have stable properties, and electronic/ionic conductivities permit meaningful separation of processes. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Surface & Interface Science | Assumes stable surface structures, reproducible adsorption/desorption behavior, meaningful averaging over surface heterogeneities, and tractable electronic structure. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Colloid & Solution Chemistry | Assumes averaged solvent environments, meaningful activity coefficients, stable particle morphologies, and tractable electrostatic screening behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Chemical Physics | Assumes meaningful mapping between molecular potentials and observables, stable state definitions, ergodicity in appropriate limits, and tractable approximations. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Structural & Mechanistic Organic Chemistry | Assumes meaningful electron-pushing notation, stable conformational sampling, reliable functional-group behavior, and transferable mechanistic logic across systems. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Stereochemistry & Conformational Analysis | Assumes reliable mapping between drawings and 3D geometry, predictable conformational preferences, valid conformer energy ordering, and consistent Cahn–Ingold–Prelog application. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Synthetic Organic Chemistry | Assumes clear retrosynthetic disconnections, reliable reagent behavior, stable stereochemical propagation, tractable purification, and predictable reaction ordering. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Physical Organic Chemistry | Assumes additivity of substituent effects, meaningful LFER parameters, stable mechanistic classification, and interpretable transition-state structures. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Organometallic Organic Chemistry | Assumes oxidative-addition/reductive-elimination logic applies broadly, ligand sterics/electronics predict behavior, and metal–carbon bonds behave consistently under typical conditions. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Polymer Chemistry (Carbon-based) | Assumes meaningful averaging over chain populations, stable propagating species, identifiable initiation/propagation/termination steps, and transferable monomer reactivity rules. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Bioorganic Chemistry | Assumes transferability of mechanistic logic from organic chemistry to biology, stable functional-group behavior in aqueous media, meaningful TS analogs, and interpretable conformational preferences. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Natural Products Chemistry | Assumes stable stereochemical assignments, consistent enzyme selectivity, predictable tailoring reactions, meaningful mapping from genome to metabolome, and reliable structural elucidation. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Medicinal Chemistry | Assumes interpretable binding pockets, drug-like space is navigable, metabolic pathways are predictable, and structural modifications produce rational changes in ADMET behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | Main-Group Chemistry | Assumes stability of oxidation states, transferability of Lewis acidity/basicity concepts, meaningful hybridization descriptions, and reliable periodic trends in structure/reactivity. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | Transition-Metal Chemistry | Assumes ligand classifications are transferable, oxidation states are well-defined, electron-counting is meaningful, and ligand-field theory/MO descriptions map reliably onto observed behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | f-Block Chemistry | Assumes stable 4f shielding, transferrable lanthanide contraction trends, meaningful oxidation-state assignments, consistent ligand-field interpretations, valid approximations of f-electron localization/delocalization. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | Coordination Chemistry | Assumes metal and ligand properties are transferable across families, stability constants are meaningful, electron-counting is valid, spin-state assignments are robust, and structural models map onto real complexes. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | Solid-State Chemistry | Assumes stable phases, meaningful averaging over unit cells, long-range order for crystals, reliable structure/property relationships, and valid mapping between lattice and macroscopic properties. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Analytical Chemistry | Qualitative Analysis | Assumes reproducibility of classical tests, transferability of spectral fingerprints, stable reagent behavior, adequate analyte concentration for detection, and meaningful presence/absence logic. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Analytical Chemistry | Quantitative Analysis | Assumes sample homogeneity, reproducible instrument behavior, stable standards, appropriate statistical models, and meaningful propagation of error across analytical steps. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Analytical Chemistry | Separation Science | Assumes reproducible stationary/mobile-phase behavior, stable analyte chemistry, meaningful plate theory descriptions, predictable retention mechanisms, and negligible uncontrolled interactions. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Analytical Chemistry | Instrumental Analysis | Assumes reproducible instrument performance, meaningful signal-to-noise ratios, stable standards, proper maintenance, and appropriate statistical models for uncertainty and noise. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Structural Biochemistry | Assumes meaningful mapping between structure and function, consistent steric/electronic behavior across residues/nucleotides, stable structural ensembles, and transferable folding/packing principles. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Enzymology | Assumes meaningful kinetic parameters, stable active-site architecture, definable transition states, interpretable allosteric responses, and reliable mapping between structure, binding, and catalysis. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Metabolism & Bioenergetics | Assumes meaningful steady states, consistent cofactor behavior, transferable thermodynamic parameters, coherent coupling between reactions, and reliable pathway compartmentalization. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Molecular Biology & Gene Expression | Assumes stable base-pairing rules, reliable protein–DNA/RNA recognition, consistent polymerase behavior, interpretable regulatory networks, and coherent mapping between genotype → transcript → protein. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Cellular Biochemistry | Assumes definable compartments, stable molecular identities, consistent membrane-barrier behavior, meaningful reaction kinetics in vivo, and reliable mapping from molecular interactions to cellular-scale outcomes. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Membrane Biochemistry | Assumes definable membrane domains, stable lipid–protein composition under given conditions, interpretable diffusion/transport behavior, reliable mapping between membrane composition and function. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Protein Chemistry | Assumes reliable mapping from sequence → structure → behavior; stable residue identity; transferable hydrophobic/hydrophilic behavior; consistent PTM effects; consistent physical laws across protein families. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Biochemical Genetics | Assumes stable genotype–phenotype relationships, conserved pathway architecture, well-defined enzyme functions, reliable kinetic modeling, interpretable metabolic signatures, and heritable molecular mechanisms. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Mineralogy & Crystallography | Assumes stable lattice representations, consistent ionic radii, predictable defect interactions, interpretable diffraction patterns, and reliable mapping between atomic arrangement and mineral properties. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Petrology | Assumes stable mineral compositions, identifiable protoliths, interpretable reaction histories, reliable mapping of mineralogy → P–T paths, and consistent relationships between mineral chemistry and bulk rock evolution. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Structural Geology & Tectonics | Assumes consistent stress/strain relationships, mappable structures, stable deformation indicators, interpretable kinematics, and reliable scaling from micro to macro-structures. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Sedimentology & Stratigraphy | Assumes persistent physical laws of fluid flow, recognizable facies patterns, mappable stratigraphic relationships, interpretable interactions of sediment supply and accommodation, and preservable depositional signatures. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Geomorphology | Assumes measurable and predictable relationships between slope, discharge, sediment supply, weathering, uplift, and landform evolution; assumes preservation of geomorphic signals; assumes scaling from process to landscape scale is meaningful. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Geophysics | Assumes stable physical constants, interpretable signals from depth, mappable field relationships, reliable inversion of physical observations, and meaningful scaling between lab measurements and Earth-scale behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Geochemistry | Assumes composition is measurable, reactions are definable, mass balance applies, thermodynamic data are transferable, and chemical signals are preserved and interpretable within geologic contexts. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Paleontology | Assumes preservable features, measurable morphology, reliable stratigraphic context, interpretable taphonomic processes, continuity of evolutionary patterns, and applicability of uniformitarian principles. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Hydrogeology | Assumes measurable hydraulic properties, mappable stratigraphy, predictable flow response to stresses, stable chemical signatures, and interpretable well and tracer data. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Economic & Applied Geology | Assumes ore grades/geometries can be mapped, geophysical signals correlate with resource properties, geochemical anomalies reflect mineralization, drilling data are representative, and future resource distributions resemble past geological trends. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Dynamic Meteorology | Assumes the atmosphere behaves as a continuous medium; that averaged or parameterized sub-grid processes meaningfully represent unresolved physics; and that large-scale dynamics dominate behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Thermodynamic Meteorology | Assumes a continuum atmosphere, predictable phase-equilibrium behavior, representative parcel behavior, and that aggregated microphysical processes define large-scale thermodynamic tendencies. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Cloud Physics & Microphysics | Assumes continuum treatment of vapor fields, representativeness of particle distributions, validity of bulk categories, and that unresolved turbulence or entrainment can be expressed through parameterizations rather than explicit dynamics. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Synoptic & Mesoscale Meteorology | Assumes mesoscale features can be meaningfully discretized, fronts treated as coherent structures, convective feedback approximated through parameterizations, and that synoptic fields provide the “environment” shaping mesoscale evolution. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Atmospheric Physics & Chemistry | Assumes radiative–chemical coupling can be treated with averaged fluxes, chemical networks can be truncated without losing essential behavior, and that transport and mixing can be parameterized rather than explicitly resolved. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Climatology & Climate Dynamics | Assumes climate statistics are meaningful over long periods, internal variability is representable, parameterizations capture essential sub-grid processes, and equilibrium or quasi-equilibrium frameworks apply in many contexts. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Oceanography | Physical Oceanography | Assumes measurable T/S fields, stable water-mass definitions, representable turbulence, reliable tracer conservation, and meaningful scaling from local observations to basin-scale processes. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Oceanography | Chemical Oceanography | Assumes measurable concentrations, stable analytical behavior, mappable chemical gradients, meaningful tracer conservation, and applicability of laboratory thermodynamics to seawater. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Oceanography | Biological Oceanography | Assumes organisms can be grouped into functional traits, biogeochemical signals are preserved, physiological responses scale to ecosystems, and food webs can be simplified into trophic pathways. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Oceanography | Geological Oceanography | Assumes sediment preservation, datable stratigraphy, interpretable microfossil/chemical proxies, measurable tectonic/geophysical signals, and continuity of depositional processes across time. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Nucleic Acid Biology | Assumes nucleic acids remain chemically stable, sequences encode meaningful biological information, modifications have interpretable roles, and enzymes act with consistent specificity. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Gene Regulation & Epigenetics | Assumes that marks carry functional meaning, regulatory interactions are interpretable, chromatin accessibility correlates with expression capacity, and that regulatory logic can be stably represented across similar cellular contexts. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Protein Biology | Assumes proteins have stable functional states, biochemical environments are reproducible, PTMs carry interpretable signals, and binding interactions follow predictable physical chemistry. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Molecular Complexes & Information Flow | Assumes complexes encode functional logic, information transfer is interpretable and not random, assembly states correlate with regulatory outcomes, and emergent properties arise consistently from subunit interactions. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Molecular Methods & Technologies | Assumes instrument readouts are interpretable, sample preparation is representative, workflow steps are reproducible, reagents behave consistently, and computational processing accurately transforms raw signals into usable outputs. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Structure & Organelles | Organelle identity is self-maintaining; targeting pathways reliably sort proteins; membrane dynamics are coordinated; crowding effects remain manageable. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cellular Dynamics & Trafficking | Motor functions are reliable, vesicle identity systems (Rabs, SNAREs) are self-maintaining, membrane fusion follows conserved mechanisms, and trafficking noise stays within biologically manageable limits. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Signaling & Communication | Assumes receptor fidelity, stable messenger identity, reliable phosphorylation/dephosphorylation cycles, consistent diffusion environments, and that noise remains biologically manageable. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Cycle, Fate & Death | Assumes regulatory networks remain functional, DNA repair is reliable, checkpoint sensors are accurate, apoptosis machinery responds predictably, and chromatin landscapes are sufficiently stable to support consistent fate outcomes. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Interactions & Microenvironment | Assumes ECM integrity persists long enough for signaling; gradients remain interpretable; adhesion molecules retain function; forces reliably transmit through cytoskeleton–ECM linkages; niche components are stable enough to define states. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Morphology & Motility | Assumes cytoskeletal integrity, reliable polymerization dynamics, stable regulatory gradients, consistent adhesion–force coupling, and predictable membrane mechanics across motility cycles. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Classical & Transmission Genetics | Assumes correct meiotic segregation, stable alleles, unbiased gamete production, reliable recombination machinery, and rare mutation within the generational timescale. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Population Genetics | Assumes reasonably stable generational structure, approximately constant parameters over modeled intervals, representative sampling, reliable fitness estimates, and that unmodeled ecological factors do not dominate dynamics. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Quantitative Genetics | Assumes stable developmental environments, consistent trait measurement, approximate normality via central limit theorem, constant allele effects over the modeled interval, and minimal confounding between genetic and environmental sources of variation. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Genomic Evolution & Comparative Genomics | Assumes sufficient conservation to infer homology, stable phylogenetic signal, reasonably accurate genome assemblies, and that stochastic mutation models approximate real evolutionary mechanisms at broad scales. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Phylogenetics & Systematics | Assumes enough phylogenetic signal exists to reconstruct relationships; homology assessments are correct; substitution models approximate real evolution; taxonomic ranks are meaningful; lineage boundaries correspond to biological entities. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Macroevolution & Speciation Theory | Assumes species boundaries are definable, macroevolutionary signals are preserved in fossil/phylogenetic data, diversification parameters are estimable, and long-term trends are not overwhelmed by noise or data incompleteness. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Cellular & Tissue Physiology | Assumes cells behave consistently under similar conditions, tissues maintain characteristic mechanical/transport properties, and microenvironmental conditions meaningfully shape physiological behavior. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Neurophysiology | Assumes neurons maintain consistent excitability rules, synaptic transmission reflects underlying molecular machinery, and extracellular conditions remain physiologically meaningful for signal propagation. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Endocrine & Regulatory Physiology | Assumes hormones convey interpretable information, target tissues maintain consistent responsiveness, endocrine axes remain physiologically coordinated, and rhythmic release patterns reflect adaptive regulatory principles. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Cardiovascular & Respiratory Physiology | Assumes vessels and airways maintain characteristic mechanical properties, blood-gas equilibria reflect consistent physicochemical laws, and reflex/regulatory responses remain coherent under physiological conditions. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Metabolic & Energetic Physiology | Assumes tissues maintain characteristic substrate preferences, metabolic pathways operate cohesively, and systemic energy needs reflect coordinated multi-organ regulation. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Renal, Fluid & Homeostatic Physiology | Assumes electrochemical gradients remain physiologically meaningful, nephrons maintain consistent transport characteristics, fluid compartments behave coherently, and systemic regulation preserves homeostasis. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Cell Fate & Lineage Specification | Assumes regulatory networks remain stable enough to define identity, signaling gradients reliably specify positional information, lineage trees are reconstructable, and stochastic fluctuations do not overwhelm the developmental program. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Pattern Formation & Embryonic Axes | Assumes morphogen production and degradation are sufficiently stable, cells can read gradients with adequate precision, symmetry-breaking is robust to noise, and organism geometry is compatible with gradient formation and axis alignment. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Morphogenesis & Tissue-Level Mechanics | Assumes accurate transmission of mechanical forces across cells, sufficiently stable adhesion networks, reliable force generation by cytoskeleton, interpretable viscoelastic behavior, and that geometry and mechanics change gradually enough to be modeled. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Organogenesis & Multi-Tissue Assembly | Assumes tissues maintain identity during assembly, signaling gradients remain interpretable, mechanical coupling remains intact across interfaces, organ geometry evolves gradually, and multi-tissue interactions produce coherent structures rather than stochastic aggregates. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Growth, Timing, Regeneration & Life-Cycle Transitions | Assumes stable developmental timers, sufficiently plastic stem-cell compartments for regeneration, interpretable injury signals, well-defined life-stage boundaries, and robust size-control mechanisms. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Evolutionary Development (Evo–Devo) | Assumes developmental programs remain stable enough for comparison, GRN architecture is inferable, morphological traits have developmental bases, and evolutionary differences arise from modifiable regulatory inputs rather than random morphological drift. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Organismal Ecology | Assumes individuals act to maintain homeostasis, environmental cues are interpretable, behavior reflects adaptive responses, and physiological traits correlate with survival in predictable ways. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Population Ecology | Assumes individuals can be aggregated into meaningful demographic units, population-level patterns are interpretable, resource limitation affects growth, and dispersal follows predictable drivers. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Community Ecology | Assumes species coexist via stable mechanisms, interactions are interpretable, communities respond coherently to environmental gradients, and diversity reflects both assembly rules and ecological opportunity. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Ecosystem Ecology | Assumes ecosystems can be treated as integrated units, fluxes are quantifiable and traceable, trophic pathways are interpretable, and mass-balance principles apply across scales. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Landscape & Spatial Ecology | Assumes landscapes can be discretized into meaningful patches, connectivity is measurable, movement follows interpretable rules, and spatial patterns meaningfully predict ecological processes. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Global Ecology & Earth-System Interactions | Assumes large-scale ecological patterns reflect underlying physical drivers, global datasets are representative, long-term trends are interpretable, and feedback mechanisms operate consistently at planetary scale. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Proof Calculi | Assumes syntactic correctness, substitution principles, structural rule behavior, and meta-level reasoning about rule admissibility and derivability. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Structural Proof Theory | Assumes rule schemas are well-formed; contexts are manipulable under structural constraints; cut-elimination or normalization is desirable or foundational; proof identity depends on structural invariants. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Proof Theory of Non-Classical Logics | Assumes rule schemas are aligned with each logic’s philosophical constraints; assumes correct propagation of labels, resources, and accessibility; presumes structural coherence between sequent format and underlying logic. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Ordinal & Strength Analysis | Assumes ordinals are well-founded; assumes ordinal notations accurately reflect conceptual transfinite strength; assumes collapsing functions behave consistently; presumes existence of canonical ordinal benchmarks. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Proof Complexity | Assumes CNF reductions are benign; complexity classes used as anchors (NP, coNP, etc.) are stable; p-simulation captures meaningful proof power; hard instances reflect true lower-bound structure; algebraic encodings preserve proof complexity faithfully. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Automated & Interactive Reasoning | Assumes trust in core kernels of proof assistants, solver correctness, stability of heuristics, faithful translation of user intentions in interactive systems, and reliable grounding of complex reasoning into formal calculi. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Structures, Languages & Interpretations | Assumes satisfaction is absolute under isomorphism, definability behaves predictably, diagrams encode structures faithfully, and embeddings preserve the essential logical structure. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Satisfaction & Definability Theory | Assumes absoluteness of satisfaction across isomorphism, predictable definability hierarchy, coherent substitution behavior, and stable semantic grounding for formulas. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Quantifier Theory & Model Completeness | Assumes definability aligns with quantifier structure, Skolemization behaves consistently, satisfaction is absolute under isomorphisms, and quantifier-elimination mirrors semantic truth conditions. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Classification Theory | Assumes ranks track structural tameness; forking reflects genuine independence; definability aligns with stability; type spaces accurately represent model-theoretic geometry. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Tame / O-Minimal Model Theory | Assumes tameness across dimensions; definability behaves geometrically; types correspond to geometric features; definability interacts smoothly with projections and fiber structures. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Axiomatic Foundations & Cumulative Hierarchy | Assumes existence of an ordinal-indexed universe, stability of rank assignments, definability aligned with hierarchy, and coherence of iterative construction across all stages. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Constructibility & Inner Models | Assumes that canonical inner models meaningfully approximate the true universe; definability produces minimal models; fine structure mirrors global set-theoretic structure; internal well-orderability. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Large Cardinal Theory | Assumes that higher large cardinals reflect and extend the structure of smaller ones; that embeddings meaningfully capture higher-order structure; that consistency strength is linearly comparable in strong cases. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Forcing & Independence Theory | Assumes meta-theoretic existence of generics; that forcing accurately simulates universe extensions; that independence proofs reflect genuine structural limitations of ZFC; that the hierarchy of forcing methods is coherent. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Descriptive Set Theory | Assumes definability reflects genuine structural complexity; hierarchies behave monotonically; determinacy (when used) provides canonical regularity; topological structure informs logical classification. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Computability Theory | Models of Computation & Recursive Function Theory | Assumes Church–Turing thesis (all reasonable models are equivalent), well-foundedness of recursive definitions, determinacy of step transitions, meaningfulness of infinite but countable computational resources, and correctness of encoding schemes. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Computability Theory | Recursively Enumerable (r.e.) Sets & Degrees | Assumes Church–Turing-style effective definability; assumes well-founded priority hierarchies; assumes limit approximations converge in the appropriate sense; presumes reducibility relations faithfully encode relative solvability. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Computability Theory | Reducibility & Degrees of Unsolvability | Assumes Church–Turing framework; assumes well-founded reducibility definitions; assumes equivalence classes reflect real structural differences; assumes encoding choices do not distort essential relations. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Computability Theory | Arithmetical & Analytical Hierarchies | Assumes classical logic; assumes well-founded indexing of quantifier complexity; presumes standard models of arithmetic/reals; assumes correct interaction between definability and reducibility; assumes Church–Turing-style effective encoding. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Group Theory | Assumes associativity always holds exactly; assumes invertibility exists for all elements; assumes algebraic structure determines symmetry behavior; assumes generating sets and relations sufficiently capture structural properties. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Ring Theory | Assumes associativity of multiplication (unless explicitly in non-associative settings); assumes ideals capture structural information; assumes generators/relations adequately describe ring structure; assumes polynomial rings behave generically across contexts. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Field Theory | Assumes associativity and commutativity of multiplication; assumes existence of algebraic closures; assumes ability to construct bases for extensions; assumes polynomials encode extension data; assumes separability is generic unless field characteristic intervenes. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Module Theory | Assumes underlying ring structure is stable; assumes bilinearity is meaningful over the chosen ring; assumes generators/relations sufficiently describe module structure; assumes exact-sequence methods capture essential algebraic behavior. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Linear Algebra | Assumes existence of bases (requires choice in general); assumes linear approximations meaningfully describe phenomena; assumes fields allow solutions of linear systems; assumes coordinate representation is faithful. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Representation Theory | Assumes existence of bases compatible with structure; assumes decomposition methods apply; assumes character theory is meaningful (in semisimple cases); assumes tensor categories behave associatively and functorially; assumes duals exist. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Universal Algebra | Assumes all relevant structure is expressible equationally; assumes algebraic reasoning is signature-driven; assumes total operations; assumes closure properties (HSP) are meaningful; assumes term formation rules govern all algebraic behavior. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Algebraic Combinatorics | Assumes combinatorial encodings faithfully match algebraic invariants; assumes basis expansions (e.g., Schur functions) are meaningful for structural analysis; assumes representations decompose in combinatorially interpretable ways; assumes manageable computational behavior for discrete families. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Real Analysis | Assumes classical logic; assumes standard topology on ℝ; assumes ability to quantify infinitesimal behavior via limits; assumes measurable sets suffice for analytic structure; assumes completeness and order structure are indispensable foundations. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Complex Analysis | Assumes standard topology and analytic structure on ℂ; assumes completeness of analytic continuation where possible; assumes differentiability in the complex sense is the central organizing principle; assumes classical contour-integration framework. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Functional Analysis | Assumes classical logic; assumes Hausdorff locally convex structures; assumes linearity dominates analytic behavior; assumes ability to extend functionals; assumes generalized functions (distributions) fit within functional-analytic dual pairs; assumes projective/inductive limits behave coherently. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Harmonic Analysis | Assumes classical measure-theoretic structure; assumes σ-finite and locally compact groups in group harmonic analysis; assumes linear operators dominate behavior; assumes dual spaces (tempered distributions) are well-defined; assumes convergence understood in distributional or Lᵖ sense when pointwise fails. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Differential Equations (ODE/PDE) | Assumes time/space are continuous; assumes derivatives encode true physical or abstract change; assumes domains allow differential structure; assumes classical calculus tools generalize to weak settings; assumes representability via operator-theoretic frameworks (semigroups, variational forms). |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Differential Geometry | Assumes differentiability behaves predictably; local linearization approximates geometry; curvature fully encodes intrinsic geometry; smooth invariants reflect geometric structure globally. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Algebraic Geometry | Assumes polynomial equations fully encode geometry; schemes generalize varieties without loss of structure; cohomology reflects geometric properties; birational equivalence captures essential classification. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Metric Geometry | Assumes distance alone captures essential geometry; curvature can be expressed by comparison; coarse geometry retains qualitative structure; tangent cones provide meaningful local models. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Point-Set Topology | Assumes topology captures “shape” at all scales; convergence via nets/filters is comprehensive; axioms (T0–T4) provide meaningful classification; product and quotient operations behave systematically. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Homotopy Theory | Assumes deformation captures “essential” topology; homotopy equivalence is the correct notion of sameness; stable phenomena reflect true underlying structure; cell decompositions sufficiently represent spaces. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Knot Theory | Assumes topological equivalence captures knot identity; planar diagram descriptions are complete; invariants can distinguish knots; prime decomposition is unique; 3-manifold topology faithfully encodes knot structure. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Elementary Number Theory | Assumes integers carry enough structure for classification; congruence relations behave uniformly; modular equivalence preserves arithmetic behavior; prime-factorization structure underlies all arithmetic. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Algebraic Number Theory | Assumes algebraic structure captures arithmetic fully; splitting/ramification mirrors deep number-theoretic behavior; ideal theory replaces integer factorization; valuations encode arithmetic information completely. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Analytic Number Theory | Assumes analytic properties mirror arithmetic structure; zeros of L-functions control distribution of primes; averages reveal true behavior; random-model heuristics approximate integer behavior; multiplicativity supports analytic decomposition. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Arithmetic Geometry | Assumes geometric invariants predict arithmetic behavior; rational points form structured sets; Diophantine phenomena reflect cohomological obstructions; reduction mod p reveals deep global information. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Modular and Automorphic Forms | Assumes automorphic representations accurately encode arithmetic; modularity reflects deep number-theoretic structure; eigenvalues correspond to arithmetic data; local–global compatibility holds; analytic properties mirror algebraic origins. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Transcendental Number Theory | Assumes sufficiently many transcendence methods exist to distinguish constants; logarithms/exponentials behave algebraically “as expected”; polynomials can approximate functions well enough to create contradictions; heights encode arithmetic complexity accurately. |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Human Evolutionary Anthropology | Assumes fossils and artifacts are representative; assumes current primates provide valid analogs; assumes genetic patterns reflect historical processes; assumes reconstructable paleoenvironmental conditions; assumes morphology reliably reflects function and adaptation. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Kinship, Descent & Domestic Organization | Assumes genealogical and social kinship can be systematically recorded; assumes normative rules influence actual behavior; assumes kinship is meaningful even in societies with weak formal lineage systems; assumes domestic units produce patterned behavior rather than random arrangements. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Ritual, Cultural Practice & Symbolic Systems | Assumes symbolic communication is meaningful and patterned; assumes ritual observation can reveal underlying values; assumes shared cultural frameworks exist; assumes cultural meaning is partially accessible to the researcher; assumes ritual performance has consistent structural elements across contexts. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Subsistence Systems, Environment & Human Adaptation | Assumes measurable links between environment and behavior; assumes subsistence decisions reflect both ecological and cultural logic; assumes landscapes and resources can be meaningfully modeled; assumes cultural transmission stabilizes adaptive strategies; assumes long-term human–environment coupling is interpretable from archaeological/ethnographic data. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Material Culture, Technology & Archaeological Interpretation | Assumes recoverability of behavior from material residues; assumes material culture has patterned variability; assumes archaeologists can distinguish cultural vs natural processes; assumes typologies and classifications capture real behavioral differences; assumes stratigraphy reflects chronological order. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Ethnographic Method & Comparative Analysis | Assumes cultures have interpretable internal logic; assumes meanings can be accessed through language and interaction; assumes prolonged presence reduces misunderstanding; assumes cultural categories can be mapped onto analytic frameworks; assumes societies can be compared using shared trait definitions. | |
| Social Sciences | Economics | Choice (Microeconomic Foundations) | Assumes decision-makers can evaluate tradeoffs coherently; assumes constraints are well-defined and binding; assumes stable technologies; assumes numeric representation of satisfaction (utility) is meaningful; assumes time and risk can be encoded via discounting and probabilities. | |
| Social Sciences | Economics | Interaction (Markets, Strategy & Mechanisms) | Assumes agents understand strategic structure; assumes communication or signaling rules are well-defined; assumes institutions function reliably; assumes equilibrium is meaningful and stable; assumes utility is transferable or comparable in mechanism design when needed; assumes prices encapsulate relevant information in competitive markets. | |
| Social Sciences | Economics | Aggregation & Dynamics (Macroeconomic Systems) | Assumes aggregability of micro behavior; assumes stable institutions; assumes policy rules are well-defined; assumes shocks follow predictable statistical structures; assumes time is continuous or discretized consistently; assumes measurement of aggregates is meaningful despite heterogeneity. | |
| Social Sciences | Geography (Human) | Spatial Patterns & Spatial Analysis | Assumes space is measurable and mappable; assumes spatial structure is meaningful; assumes observed distributions reflect real processes; assumes analytic categories (regions, clusters, flows) correspond to functional realities; assumes spatial autocorrelation exists unless proven absent. | |
| Social Sciences | Geography (Human) | Mobility, Flows & Connectivity | Assumes that flows can be measured and mapped; assumes connectivity patterns reflect real behavior; assumes movement data represent broader mobility systems; assumes spatial interaction follows identifiable laws; assumes network structure meaningfully shapes outcomes; assumes regions are connected through measurable pathways. | |
| Social Sciences | Geography (Human) | Human–Environment Interaction & Landscape Modification | Assumes environmental change can be observed, measured, and modeled; assumes human effects are distinct from purely natural forces; assumes landscapes have interpretable anthropogenic signatures; assumes long-term trajectories can be reconstructed; assumes cultural values influence environmental action. | |
| Social Sciences | Geography (Human) | Place, Territory & Spatial Experience | Assumes place meanings can be accessed through discourse and behavior; assumes territories express underlying power relations; assumes lived experience can be systematically documented; assumes symbolic landscapes are interpretable; assumes spatial claims have observable manifestations; assumes perception influences spatial practice. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Phonetics & Phonology | Assumes phonological categories are psychologically real; acoustic cues reliably map to phonological features; phonotactic structures reflect underlying mental representations; speakers aim for efficient, interpretable signaling. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Morphology | Assumes morphemes are psychologically real; morphological patterns generalize to new forms; decomposition reflects mental representation; morphological categories align with syntactic/semantic roles; cross-linguistic patterns signify deeper universals. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Syntax | Assumes syntactic knowledge is mentally represented; acceptability judgments reflect underlying competence; universal constraints exist; derivations operate on symbolic structures; syntax interfaces with semantics and phonology via structured representations. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Semantics | Assumes meanings are mentally represented; truth conditions correspond to cognitive representations of situations; formal semantic categories reflect genuine linguistic universals; interpretation relies on structured internal mappings. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Pragmatics | Assumes speakers intend to be understood; hearers seek optimal interpretation; relevance principles hold; cultural norms guide pragmatic inference; meaning beyond literal form is recoverable by structured reasoning. | |
| Social Sciences | Political Science | Political Institutions & Formal Political Order | Assumes institutions matter independently of individual personalities; assumes rules are at least partially enforced; assumes formal structures shape incentives; assumes legal authority is recognized; assumes institutional change is path-dependent and structured. | |
| Social Sciences | Political Science | Political Behavior, Mobilization & Collective Action | Assumes measurable attitudes approximate internal beliefs; assumes behavioral responses emerge from observable contexts; assumes group identities are meaningful predictors; assumes communication networks exist; assumes collective-action incentives are structured and stable enough to model. | |
| Social Sciences | Political Science | Governance, Policy Formation & State Capacity | Assumes policy processes can be specified and measured; assumes bureaucratic behavior is shaped by incentives and rules; assumes capacity is multi-dimensional but trackable; assumes state authority is at least partially legitimate; assumes policy goals are expressible and comparable across contexts. | |
| Social Sciences | Political Science | International Relations & Global Order | Assumes states exist as coherent actors; assumes international norms carry some binding force; assumes power can be meaningfully measured; assumes geopolitical regions have stable identities; assumes patterns of conflict and cooperation are generalizable; assumes institutions influence behavior despite anarchy. | |
| Social Sciences | Psychology | Cognitive Processes & Mental Architecture | Assumes internal representations exist and are structured; cognition is lawful and regular; mental operations can be experimentally isolated; underlying architecture is consistent across tasks; observable behavior reflects internal processes. | |
| Social Sciences | Psychology | Learning, Conditioning & Behavioral Mechanisms | Assumes environmental contingencies dominate over internal states; associations form similarly across individuals; reinforcement histories fully explain behavior; external observation captures learning processes. | |
| Social Sciences | Psychology | Emotion, Motivation & Affect Regulation | Assumes coherence between physiological arousal and subjective emotion; motivation reliably predicts behavior; regulation strategies have measurable outcomes; emotional categories map onto consistent biological systems. | |
| Social Sciences | Psychology | Development, Individual Differences & Psychometrics | Assumes individuals differ in stable ways; traits/abilities can be inferred from observed responses; growth patterns reflect underlying mechanisms; psychometric constructs map onto meaningful psychological dimensions. | |
| Social Sciences | Sociology | Social Interaction Mechanisms | Assumes meaning-making is foundational; individuals are socially embedded; shared symbols exist; micro-interactions reflect larger cultural patterns even if not directly examined. | |
| Social Sciences | Sociology | Social Structure Mechanisms | Assumes structure persists over time; categories hold social meaning; positions are socially consequential; institutions remain stable enough to organize behavior; resources follow structured distribution patterns. | |
| Social Sciences | Sociology | Social Network & Relational Dynamics | Assumes relational data approximate real ties; actors respond to structural opportunities; patterns are meaningfully measurable; networks can be decomposed into nodes/edges without losing essential relational information. |