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N-Dimensional Intelligence

The capacity to perceive, navigate, and manipulate information across an arbitrary number of dimensions, a trait that varies wildly among individuals and explains why some people seem to "see" solutions that others miss. High N-dimensional intelligence means being able to hold multiple dimensional perspectives simultaneously, recognize patterns that span dimensions, and make decisions that optimize outcomes across the entire hyperdimensional landscape. Low N-dimensional intelligence means being stuck in 3D, wondering why the universe seems so confusing and why you keep stepping on Legos (which, in higher dimensions, are clearly visible and avoidable). Standard intelligence tests measure only 3D intelligence, which is why the guy who can't do basic math can sometimes predict the future—he's just accessing a dimension where it already happened.
Example: "She was known for her N-dimensional intelligence, able to see connections that others missed and predict outcomes with uncanny accuracy. When asked how she did it, she said 'I just look at the problem from all dimensions.' Her colleagues assumed this was metaphorical. She never corrected them, because in some dimensions, it wasn't."
by Dumu The Void February 14, 2026
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The principle that between any two points on any logical spectrum, there exists not just a continuum but an intermediate spectrum—a whole range of positions that are neither one thing nor the other but participate in both. The law of the intermediate spectrum acknowledges that the space between "true" and "false" isn't just "partially true" but contains infinite varieties of partial truth—truth-adjacent, truth-approximate, truth-conditional, truth-in-context. It's the logic of "it's complicated," of "yes and no," of "technically correct but practically wrong." The law of the intermediate spectrum is the enemy of simplistic thinking and the friend of anyone who's ever said "it depends."
Example: "She applied the law of the intermediate spectrum to the question 'was that movie good?' Between 'good' and 'bad' lay an intermediate spectrum: technically impressive but emotionally hollow, well-acted but poorly written, great for its genre but not for general audiences. The intermediate spectrum captured the nuance that binary ratings erased. Her friends wished she'd just say yes or no."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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The principle that between truth and falsehood lies an infinite intermediate zone—claims that are partly true, mostly true, true in context, true conditionally, true approximately. The law of the intermediate truth recognizes that most important claims live in this zone, not at the poles. "Vaccines are safe" is not absolutely true (no intervention is 100% safe) but is true enough for practical purposes. "This relationship is good" is not universally true (it has bad moments) but is true in aggregate. The intermediate truth is where most of life happens, and the law that acknowledges it is the foundation of wisdom.
Example: "He asked if the movie was good. She couldn't say yes or no—it was good in parts, bad in parts, good for some audiences, bad for others, good in intention, bad in execution. The law of the intermediate truth gave her language: 'It's on the spectrum of good. Upper half, maybe? Depends what you value.' He wanted a binary; she gave him nuance. He watched it anyway and had his own intermediate experience."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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The application of Critical Theory to the concept of intelligence—examining how intelligence is defined, measured, and used, and how these practices reflect and reinforce social hierarchies. Critical Theory of Intelligence asks: Whose definition of intelligence counts? How have intelligence tests been used to justify racism, classism, and ableism? What counts as "smart" in different cultures? Who benefits from treating intelligence as a fixed, measurable trait? Drawing on critical psychology, disability studies, and anti-racist thought, it insists that intelligence is never neutral—it's always political, always a site of struggle over who counts as capable, worthy, human.
"They measure IQ and rank people. Critical Theory of Intelligence asks: measure what? Developed by whom? Intelligence tests were designed to prove white supremacy—that's their history. Even today, they measure familiarity with dominant culture, not some universal 'smart.' Critical theory insists on asking: who benefits from defining intelligence this way? And what would we see if we valued different kinds of smart?"
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
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A framework proposing that intelligence itself is elastic—that intelligent systems (human or artificial) can stretch their capabilities across domains, contexts, and challenges without breaking. Elastic Intelligence suggests that intelligence isn't a fixed capacity (IQ) but a stretchy ability: what counts as intelligent stretches across tasks, across cultures, across species. The theory identifies intelligence's elastic limits: when does stretching become overreach? When does adaptation become maladaptation? Understanding intelligence requires understanding its stretch. A meta-framework examining how conceptions of intelligence stretch across history, culture, and discipline. The Elasticity of Intelligence studies how intelligence has been defined—from g-factor to multiple intelligences to cultural intelligence—and how these definitions stretch under pressure from new research, new contexts. It asks: what are the limits of intelligence's stretch? When does a new conception break rather than stretch? How does intelligence recover from its own abuses (intelligence testing used for eugenics)? It's intelligence reflecting on its own history and possibilities.
Theory of Elastic Intelligence "He was brilliant in math but struggled with people—intelligence stretched unevenly. Elastic Intelligence says that's normal: intelligence stretches differently across domains. The question isn't how intelligent you are; it's how far your intelligence stretches—and where it snaps." "Intelligence used to mean IQ; now it means emotional intelligence, social intelligence, practical intelligence. Theory of the Elasticity of Intelligence says that's a stretch—a necessary one. The question is whether the concept can stretch further—to include AI intelligence, collective intelligence—without breaking."
by Nammugal March 4, 2026
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A framework proposing that the internet can induce dissociative states—a splitting between online and offline selves, between virtual and real experience. Internet Dissociation occurs when the gap between digital life and embodied life becomes so wide that integration fails. People forget that online actions have real consequences; they experience themselves as separate from their avatars; they lose touch with the physical world. The theory explains internet addiction, online disinhibition, and the strange feeling of "coming back" after hours online.
Theory of Internet Dissociation "He spent twelve hours online, and when he looked up, the room was dark and he couldn't remember the day. Internet Dissociation: the online self split from the offline self, time lost, presence forgotten. The internet doesn't just distract; it dissociates. The question is whether we can integrate our digital and physical selves before the split becomes permanent."
by Dumu The Void March 4, 2026
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A framework extending malandragem to international relations—examining how nations use cunning, strategic ambiguity, and rule-bending to navigate global systems. International Malandragem theory asks: How do weaker nations use cleverness against stronger ones? How do all nations exploit loopholes in international law? When does strategic ambiguity become deception? The theory reveals that the international system, like any rigid structure, produces its own forms of evasion—and that the most successful nations are often the most malandros.
Theory of International Malandragem "The small nation played the superpowers against each other, promising everything to everyone, delivering just enough to survive. That's International Malandragem: cunning as foreign policy. The strong make rules; the clever work around them. The theory asks: is this corruption or just the only game the weak can play?"
by Dumu The Void March 5, 2026
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