Conspirology is from Latin: (conspiratio - conspiracy); and Greek: (λογία - logia), it is the scientific study of the nature, causes and effects, measurement, control, and prevention of conspiratorial behaviors both in the individual and in society.
Conspirology is an interdisciplinary field within speculative sciences, drawing particularly from research in criminology, sociology, political science, psychology and psychiatry, anthropology, linguistics, history, theology, and other related disciplines.
The 1st law - If you can think of a conspiracy that can exist, it already does. The main problem is to detect, solve and expose it, which is the conspiratorial paradox.
Conspiracy - the secret plan of a group to do something illegal or harmful against others.
Hypothesis - based on argued basic ideas as a starting point for a theory.
Theory - based on argued facts that expose a conspiracy as truth or consensus.
Source - a person, information, or phenomenon used to provide evidence in the search for truth.
Holistic - Conspiracy must be considered as a whole, not as collections of independent parts.
Heuristic - Conspiracy can be solved with intuitive judgment, thus based on stereotypes and common sense.
Detection - "Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by malice; this is a start for the search for truth." - Unknown
Deduction - "Once you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." - Conan Doyle
Illusion - "Once you have eliminated the possible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be false." - Tiziano Sclavi