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Ideocontradiction

A contradiction between ideological commitments that a person or group holds simultaneously, often without conscious awareness. It occurs when two or more beliefs, values, or principles are logically incompatible, yet both are maintained because they serve different emotional, social, or political functions. For example, someone might champion individual liberty while also supporting censorship of opposing views. Unlike ordinary hypocrisy, ideocontradiction is usually internalized—the person genuinely doesn’t see the clash because each belief operates in a separate mental compartment. Identifying ideocontradictions is a key tool of critical analysis, revealing hidden tensions within ideologies.
Example: “He advocated for free speech absolutism but wanted to ban ‘hate speech’ he disagreed with—an ideocontradiction he never noticed, because each principle lived in a different part of his worldview.”

Ideocognition

The shaping of cognitive processes—perception, memory, reasoning, attention—by ideological commitments. Ideocognition describes how ideology does not just influence what people believe, but how they think: what they notice, what they remember, what they find plausible, and how they weigh evidence. It explains why people on opposite sides of a political divide can see the same event and come away with entirely different “facts.” Ideocognition is not mere bias; it is the cognitive architecture through which ideology becomes self‑confirming.
Example: “His ideocognition was so strong that he literally could not recall evidence contradicting his worldview—his memory had been ideologically pruned.”
Ideocognition by Abzugal April 16, 2026

Ideocognitive

Adjective describing the intersection of ideology and cognition—how ideological frameworks shape basic cognitive processes like attention, memory, categorization, and inference. An ideocognitive approach recognizes that what we notice, what we remember, and what we consider relevant are never purely neutral but are filtered through ideological lenses. The term is used to analyze phenomena like selective exposure (seeking confirming information), motivated reasoning (evaluating evidence to reach preferred conclusions), and the persistence of discredited beliefs despite counter-evidence. Ideocognitive processes are not flaws but features of how human minds work in social contexts.
Example: "Her ideocognitive bias meant she remembered every flaw in the opposing argument but forgot the weaknesses in her own—not dishonesty, but ideology shaping memory."

How bout dem knicks? 

A phrase referring twoard the New York Knicks.
Its usually said to break an unplesent moment of silence.
Guy 1: I think I may be gay.
Guy 2: ...
Guy 1: ...
Guy 2: How bout dem knicks?
How bout dem knicks? by Flame060 March 28, 2005
Word of the Day on June 8, 2026

Power Couple 

A relationship between two people who are equally as cool as each other. They are as individually awesome and fun to be around as they are when they are together.

Neither one depends on the other for their feelings of self worth- they know in their heart that they are just as valuable to the world as the other. Good looking, optimistic, and sparks a light in the world that people recognize that goes beyond a normal relationship.

In a power couple, if one person is flawed, the other person makes up for their weaknesses in strength. Together they are the epitome of what anyone would desire in a relationship. They encourage goodness in the world and make it a better place by being together.
I'm a fan of those two, they are such a power couple, the epitome of what anyone would want in a relationship.

I am envious of them because they are a power couple.
Power Couple by Pina28 May 23, 2012
Word of the Day on June 7, 2026
Spidey sense for evading poop on the street, canine or otherwise.
When walking in NYC or LA, you need shitdar.
Shitdar by Sickomonster June 3, 2026
Word of the Day on June 6, 2026