noun
trüth ob· scu· ra
/tro͞oTH/ /əb-ˈskyu̇r-ə/
...a deliberately hidden or obscured truth, veiled by complexity, misinformation, or selective disclosure—often under the guise of "need-to-know" or official narrative control
trüth ob· scu· ra
/tro͞oTH/ /əb-ˈskyu̇r-ə/
...a deliberately hidden or obscured truth, veiled by complexity, misinformation, or selective disclosure—often under the guise of "need-to-know" or official narrative control
Many believe the government’s silence on UAP encounters is not ignorance, but a calculated truth obscura—a policy of concealment masked as national security.
by Pidi Picaso April 24, 2025
Get the truth obscura mug.The pervasive human cognitive tendency to initially accept information as true, especially if it aligns with pre-existing beliefs or comes from a seemingly credible source, before expending the mental energy to critically evaluate or verify it. It’s the mind’s default "truth until proven false" setting, a mental shortcut that saves energy but makes us vulnerable to misinformation, propaganda, and the first compelling narrative we hear. In a debate, it’s the unfair advantage held by the person who speaks first and most confidently.
Example: You read a headline that says "Study: Coffee Causes Cancer." Your immediate, gut reaction is a spike of worry—that's Truth Bias in action. Only later, if at all, do you check if the study was on rats, involved absurd doses, or was funded by a tea company. The false claim gets a free pass into your brain because skepticism requires conscious effort.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
Get the Truth Bias mug.Related Words
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by i Drink bLood XD February 6, 2026
Get the truth = ban mug.The cognitive bias where one assumes that their own perception of truth is simply "the truth"—not a perspective, not an interpretation, not a construction, but truth itself. Truth Bias is the foundation of all dogmatism, the root of all certainty that cannot be shaken. It's the bias that makes people say "I'm not entitled to my opinion, I'm entitled to my facts"—as if their facts were the facts. Truth Bias is invisible to those who hold it because it feels like clarity, like seeing things as they really are. It's only from outside that it looks like what it is: a bias, like any other, just one that denies it's a bias.
Example: "He didn't have opinions; he had truths. When she offered a different perspective, he didn't engage—he corrected. Truth Bias meant that his view wasn't a view; it was reality. Everyone else was confused, misled, or lying. He wasn't arguing; he was declaring. The bias was invisible to him, which is how it maintained its power."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
Get the Truth Bias mug.The use of "truth" as a rhetorical weapon—invoking truth to end discussion, dismiss opponents, or claim authority without justification. Truth Sophism treats "truth" as a possession, not a goal: "I have the truth" means "you have nothing to say." The sophist doesn't demonstrate truth; they assert it, using the word's power to silence. It's sophistry about truth: using the concept to avoid the work of finding it.
"I'm just interested in the truth, unlike you." Truth Sophism: using truth as a cudgel, not a compass. The claim to truth became a way to dismiss, not a way to inquire. Truth wasn't sought; it was asserted—and anyone who disagreed was against truth itself."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
Get the Truth Sophism mug.The established, institutionalized set of beliefs about truth that dominate Western epistemology and everyday discourse—the often-unexamined assumptions that truth is objective, that it corresponds to reality, that it's discoverable through reason and evidence, that some claims are simply true regardless of perspective, and that truth is the ultimate standard for evaluating beliefs. Truth orthodoxy includes specific commitments: that truth is singular (there can't be multiple truths), that truth is universal (what's true here is true everywhere), that truth is timeless (what's true now was always true), that truth is independent of knowers. Like all orthodoxies, it provides a framework for epistemic understanding, but it functions as ideology when it becomes dogmatic—making a particular conception of truth seem like the only conception, obscuring how truth practices vary across cultures and contexts, and delegitimizing alternative understandings (pragmatic truth, perspectival truth, truth as correspondence to experience rather than reality). Truth orthodoxy determines what claims are considered "true," what epistemic practices are "valid," and who counts as "rational" versus "relativist."
Example: "He insisted that his view was simply 'the truth'—not because he'd examined alternatives, but because truth orthodoxy had made his perspective invisible to himself. The orthodoxy's power is making particular truths feel like Truth itself."
by Dumu The Void March 17, 2026
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