Skip to main content

Majority Bias

A cognitive and social tendency to instinctively side with, trust, and defer to the perceived majority opinion within a group, regardless of the opinion's factual or ethical merits. It's the mental shortcut that "if most people believe it, it must be true/safe/right." This bias underpins conformity, groupthink, and the chilling effect where dissenting voices are silenced not by law, but by the sheer social weight of assumed consensus.
Example: In a meeting, even members who privately doubt a plan will remain silent and eventually agree once they perceive (rightly or wrongly) that "most people" are for it. This Majority Bias creates false unanimity and leads to disastrous decisions because the actual distribution of critical thought is hidden by the fear of being the outlier.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
mugGet the Majority Bias mug.

Majoritarian Picking

The hypocritical practice of appealing to majority rule to legitimize one's own preferred policies, while crying foul and appealing to minority or individual rights when the majority opposes something one holds dear. It's the tactical, unprincipled use of the "majority" as a shield and a sword, depending entirely on which way the wind is blowing.
Example: A group argues that prayer in public schools should be allowed because "the majority in this community are Christian." Yet, the same group opposes community consensus when the majority supports a tax for LGBTQ+ youth services, arguing instead for "individual religious freedom." This is Majoritarian Picking.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
mugGet the Majoritarian Picking mug.
Related Words

Majority Picking

A manipulative communication tactic where a speaker claims their position is the "majority view" without robust evidence, or by cherry-picking a single favorable poll, to create a bandwagon effect and pressure dissenters into silence. It's the manufacturing of a false consensus to win an argument through social pressure, not persuasion.
Majority Picking Example: During a company debate about returning to the office, a manager says, "I've talked to a lot of people, and the majority really want to be back full-time." They have no survey data—they've just "picked" the opinions of a few like-minded senior staff to present as the majority will, quashing the concerns of silent younger employees.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
mugGet the Majority Picking mug.
The claim that the preferences, culture, or interests of a demographic majority are inherently legitimate, morally right, and should dominate public life and policy, simply by virtue of numbers. It rationalizes the marginalization of minorities as "the will of the people" and frames protections for minorities as undemocratic special treatment.
Example: Opposing bilingual education or signage by saying, "This is America, we speak English here. The majority shouldn't have to accommodate a few." This majoritarianist rationalization conflates numerical dominance with moral authority, using democracy as a weapon to enforce cultural assimilation and deny pluralism.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
mugGet the Majoritarianist Rationalization mug.

Majority Neutrality Bias

The belief that the most common or popular position on an issue is automatically the most neutral one—that consensus equals objectivity. The Majority Neutralist assumes that if most people believe something, that belief must be free of bias, because bias is deviation from the norm. This flips the actual relationship: majorities have the most powerful biases, the ones that get to dress up as "common sense" precisely because they're invisible to those who hold them. The majority view isn't neutral—it's just the bias you don't have to defend.
"Most people in this country agree with me, so I'm obviously not biased—I'm just normal." That's Majority Neutrality Bias: mistaking the water you're swimming in for the absence of water.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 22, 2026
mugGet the Majority Neutrality Bias mug.

Majoritarian Fallacy

A fallacy and metafallacy where one argues that slavery is acceptable if a majority votes for it, that atrocities are justified if a majority supports them, that abuses are legitimate if they have popular backing. The Majoritarian Fallacy confuses descriptive fact (many people want this) with normative justification (this is therefore right)—and worse, uses majority support to immunize atrocities from critique. It's the logic behind "if it was so bad, why did everyone go along with it?" and "democratically elected authoritarianism is still democracy" and "the people have spoken." The fallacy lies in treating majority preference as moral warrant, as if numbers could transmute exploitation into legitimacy, as if counting hands could launder blood. It's a metafallacy because it preemptively delegitimizes critique—challenging the atrocity becomes challenging the people, questioning the majority becomes questioning democracy itself.
Example: "He defended the regime by pointing to election results—as if 51% support made concentration camps acceptable. Pure Majoritarian Fallacy: treating majority preference as if it could sanctify any horror."
by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
mugGet the Majoritarian Fallacy mug.

Majority Opinion

Isn't truth. It's the ad populum fallacy. That is why not-smart.
Hym "Hahahahaha! Majority Opinion!? Ha! That is hilarious!"
by Hym Iam March 19, 2025
mugGet the Majority Opinion mug.

Share this definition

Sign in to vote

We'll email you a link to sign in instantly.

Or

Check your email

We sent a link to

Open your email