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Bounded System Reality

A model of reality with clear boundaries, definite limits, and finite possibilities—the opposite of unlimited system reality. In bounded system reality, you have to make choices, accept constraints, and live with the consequences. This is the reality of everyday life—of deadlines, budgets, physical laws, and the fact that you can't be in two places at once. Bounded system reality is frustrating if you're an idealist and comforting if you're an overthinker. It's what makes decisions possible and regret inevitable. It's also where most people actually live, even if they dream of the unlimited version.
Example: "She dreamed of unlimited system reality—infinite time, infinite money, infinite possibilities. Then she remembered her rent was due, her boss expected her at 9, and she could only eat one lunch. Bounded system reality reasserted itself. The boundaries were annoying, but they also made choice possible. She paid her rent, went to work, ate her lunch. The infinite could wait."
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Bounded System Logic

A logical framework designed for systems with clear boundaries, definite constraints, and finite possibilities—where conclusions must respect the limits of the system. Bounded system logic is the logic of everyday life, of practical decision-making, of working within constraints. It acknowledges that you can't be everywhere at once, that resources are limited, that time moves forward. Bounded system logic is less exciting than unlimited logic but more useful—it actually helps you make decisions. It's the logic of "given these constraints, what's the best we can do?" rather than "in an infinite universe, anything is possible."
Example: "She applied bounded system logic to her budget. In unlimited logic, she could buy everything. In bounded logic, she had to choose—rent or vacation, savings or splurge. The boundaries were frustrating but clarifying. She paid rent, saved a little, and planned a modest staycation. Bounded system logic didn't give her everything she wanted, but it gave her a life she could actually live."
Bounded System Logic by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026

Bounded System Truth

Truth that exists within systems with clear boundaries, definite limits, and finite possibilities—the truth of everyday life. In bounded system truth, choices have consequences, facts are facts, and you can't be in two places at once. This is the truth of deadlines, budgets, physics, and the fact that you have to pick one lunch. Bounded system truth is less exciting than unlimited truth but more useful—it actually helps you navigate the world. It's the truth of adults who've accepted that infinity is a concept, not a lunch menu.
Example: "She dreamed of unlimited truth—infinite possibilities, infinite choices. Then her rent was due. Bounded system truth reasserted itself: finite money, finite time, finite options. She paid the rent, ate leftovers, and accepted that bounded truth, however limiting, was where she actually lived. The infinite could wait."
Bounded System Truth by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026

Bounded System

A system with clear boundaries—a definite edge between inside and outside, limited extent, manageable scope. Bounded systems are what we try to create when reality gets too complex: a budget (bounded by dollars), a project (bounded by scope), a relationship agreement (bounded by rules). Bounded systems are comforting because you can understand them, control them, predict them. The problem is that most real systems aren't bounded—we just pretend they are so we can function. A budget is bounded; your actual financial life isn't. A project plan is bounded; the actual work isn't. Boundaries are useful fictions, but they're still fictions.
Example: "He created a bounded system for his work—clear tasks, clear deadlines, clear boundaries between work and life. For a while, it worked. Then a crisis hit, and the boundaries dissolved. Work leaked into life, deadlines shifted, tasks multiplied. The bounded system had been a useful fiction, but a fiction nonetheless. He rebuilt it, knowing it would fail again. That's what you do with bounded systems—you maintain the fiction because the alternative is chaos."
Bounded System by Abzunammu February 16, 2026

Bounded Logic

A logical framework that acknowledges the limits of human reasoning: finite time, limited memory, computational complexity, and cognitive biases. Bounded logic is not a formal system per se but a meta‑logical concept derived from bounded rationality (Herbert Simon). It studies what agents can actually compute or infer given realistic constraints, as opposed to ideal rationality (unlimited time, perfect memory). It is used in artificial intelligence (satisficing algorithms), behavioral economics, and epistemology (fallibilism). In online debates, “bounded logic” is a humbling reminder that even the most rational participant has cognitive limits. It is often invoked to criticize demands for perfect, exhaustive reasoning: “You want a fully formal proof? That’s impossible within bounded logic. We make do with what we have.”
Example: “He demanded she consider every possible counterexample before making a conclusion. She replied: ‘That’s unbounded logic – impossible for any human. Bounded logic accepts that we make decisions with limited information and time. It’s not a flaw; it’s a feature.’”

dumb bounded 

A situation where you are not actually dumb founded but become bounded.
I was dumb bounded being around with people at the workplace.
dumb bounded by doodling July 1, 2011

cad and bounder 

This phrase is worth noting precisely because it does not belong in this dictionary: it makes sense in a moral universe that has utterly vanished. The last "cad and bounder" died, perhaps, about 1947 (see London Daily Telegraph obituaries for further evidence).

Although they are appropriately linked, the precise meanings differ. A "cad" is one who does harm to a woman's honor or sense of self-worth as, for example, by taking her for a garden walk when he has no intention of marrying her. A "bounder" is a presumptious upstart, seemingly ignorant of, but perhaps merely indifferent to, fundamental norms of propriety.
You, sir, are a cad and a bounder.

A cad perhaps, but no bounder. My family goes back to William I.
cad and bounder by Buce August 9, 2005