This page serves as a living glossary of terms, phrases, and concepts that recur throughout my writing, many of them unofficial, emergent, or deliberately under-defined elsewhere. Its purpose is simple: to name patterns that are widely experienced but rarely articulated, particularly those arising from late-stage capitalism’s influence on behaviour, design, labour, identity, and power. While the focus remains firmly on capitalist systems and their effects, this lexicon also includes selected terms relating to neurodivergence, disability, accessibility, and cognitive load, not as a diversion, but because these domains repeatedly collide with economic agendas in ways that expose structural priorities, hidden incentives, and ethical fault lines. This is not a neutral dictionary, nor a comprehensive one; it is a practical tool for clarity, shared reference, and resistance to linguistic vagueness.
Filter A–Z
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Artificial Rarity
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Artificial Scarcity
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Artificial Stimulation
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Artificial Urgency
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Artwashing
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Aspirational Consumption
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Aspirational Normalisation
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Asymmetric Risk
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Attention Capture
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Attention Economy
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Attrition by Design
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Attritional Harm
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Audience Capture
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Austerity
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Austerity as Moral Test
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Austerity Rhetoric
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Authenticity Performance
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Authenticity Tax
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Authoritarian Governance
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Authority Bias
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Authority Framing
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Authority Laundering
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Availability Creep
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Availability Heuristic
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Background Coercion
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Bait and Switch
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Baseline Bias
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Battle Pass
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Behavioural Bias Exploitation
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Behavioural Data
