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  • 2021-12-04 (xsd:date)
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  • Is 'Ecneics' ('Science' Spelled Backwards) a Pagan Word? (en)
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  • In November 2021, health officials announced that they had discovered a new variant of COVID-19 and that they were calling the new strain omicron. Shortly thereafter, internet users pointed out that omicron is an anagram for moronic. While this linguistic oddity proved humorous to some, others attempted to use this interesting, albeit completely irrelevant, factoid to sow doubt about the vaccines, falsely claiming that the pandemic was a hoax and that scientists were flaunting their control over society by naming these variants with disguised insults. (In reality, this variant was named after a letter in the Greek alphabet.) As this conspiracy theory gained traction, a similar rumor started to circulate on social media claiming that ecneics, science spelled backwards, was a pagan term for a device that was used to summon Satin (an apparent misspelling of Satan). Ecneics is not a pagan word for a Satin-summoning device that was used to brianwash children and turn them into syantasts. We couldn't find this word in any English-language dictionaries. We also searched a number of pagan and Wiccan books — such as The Dictionary of Wicca, Witchcraft and Magick, A Popular Dictionary of Paganism, The Wiccan's Dictionary of Prophecy and Omens, and A Dictionary of Pagan Religions — but found no mentions of this word. The above-displayed tweet has been floating around since at least 2019. It's often shared in jest by those mocking people who have endorsed pseudoscience (such as those putting weight on the fact that omicron is an anagram of moronic). It was first posted by the now-defunct Twitter account @Warriorofwoke, an account that frequently posted messages about chemtrail and flat earth conspiracy theories. While we're not sure of the original poster's intent, the multiple misspellings in this tweet, the outrageousness of the claim, and the fact that it was posted by an account that often posted outlandish takes on conspiracy theories, leads us to believe that this message was first posted as a joke. In any case, ecneics is not a pagan word. Even so, it has been used on occasion over the decades. In 1974, the New Scientists published an article about The Philosopher of Ecneics, a Japanese doctor who believed it was important to be critical of the influence science had on society. More recently, Chicago Tribune columnist Rex Huppke used the word in a 2015 article, writing: (en)
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