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Logigate

To reason through a problem using deductive logic and evidence.
“I sat down the night before the exam and tried to logigate every reaction mechanism instead of memorizing them.”
by Mr. Tra February 25, 2026
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Logical Biases

Systematic distortions in reasoning that arise not from breaking logical rules but from the way logical systems themselves are constructed, selected, and applied. Unlike cognitive biases (which are psychological), Logical Biases are built into the logic we use—the assumptions that certain logical forms are universally valid, that classical logic is the only logic, that formal validity guarantees truth. Logical Biases include: preferring deductive over inductive reasoning even when deduction isn't appropriate; treating logical consistency as the highest virtue when life requires contradiction; assuming that what's logically possible is actually possible. Logical Biases are what happen when logic becomes ideology—when the tool becomes the master.
Logical Biases "He keeps demanding that my ethical argument be deductively valid. That's Logical Bias—applying deductive standards to ethics, which isn't deductive. His logic biases him against forms of reasoning that don't fit his logical framework. Logic should serve inquiry, not constrain it. When logic becomes a bias, it stops being logic."
by Dumu The Void March 1, 2026
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Logic Biases

A variant of Logical Biases, emphasizing biases that affect how we use and evaluate logic itself. Logic Biases include: treating logic as neutral when it's culturally specific; assuming that logical skill equals intelligence; privileging logical argument over other forms of knowing; using logic as a weapon rather than a tool. Logic Biases are meta-biases—biases about logic, not just in logic. They shape who gets heard, what counts as reasonable, and which conclusions are considered valid.
Logic Biases "He thinks he's won every argument because he's 'more logical.' That's Logic Bias—treating his particular logical style as universal reason. But his logic is one logic among many, and his bias makes him blind to other ways of reasoning. Logic isn't a contest; it's a conversation. Logic biases turn conversation into combat."
by Dumu The Void March 1, 2026
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Logical Metametabiases

The most meta level of bias: biases about biases about logic—systematic distortions in how we think about our thinking about logical systems. Logical MetaMetabiases occur when we develop theories about logical biases that are themselves biased, creating infinite regress of reflection. They include: assuming we can fully escape logical bias; treating awareness of bias as immunity to it; using meta-analysis as a way to feel superior rather than to understand; creating hierarchies of bias-awareness that become new biases. Logical MetaMetabiases are what happen when reflexivity becomes its own form of blindness—when knowing about bias becomes a way of not seeing your own.
Logical Metametabiases "He's read all the books on logical biases, so now he thinks he's immune. That's Logical Metametabias—using knowledge of bias as a shield against self-examination. Knowing about bias doesn't eliminate it; it just gives you new ways to be biased about bias. The meta-level isn't escape; it's just another level. Thinking you've transcended bias is the ultimate bias."
by Dumu The Void March 1, 2026
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Logic Metabiases

Second-order biases about logic itself—biases in how we evaluate, teach, and apply logical systems. Logic Metabiases include: treating classical logic as the baseline and others as deviations; assuming logical skill is innate rather than learned; using logic to police rather than to understand; believing that more logic always leads to better thinking; assuming logical people are less biased. Logic Metabiases are biases about logic's role, value, and nature—not biases in logical reasoning, but biases in how we relate to logic as a practice.
Logic Metabiases "He thinks studying logic makes him objective. That's Logic Metabias—confusing logical training with freedom from bias. Logic is a tool; using it doesn't make you unbiased—it just gives you a particular kind of training. The metabias is thinking logic is above bias, when it's actually one of the places bias hides best."
by Dumu The Void March 1, 2026
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Logical Double Standards

A fallacy where someone applies logical standards inconsistently—accusing opponents of fallacies while committing the same ones, demanding evidence they don't provide, requiring certainty they don't practice. The classic form: accusing someone of "jumping to conclusions" while leaping to your own; crying "ad hominem" while attacking character; demanding "evidence" while ignoring counter-evidence. Logical Double Standards reveal that the invocation of logic is often strategic, not principled—logic as weapon, not tool. The double standard is the point: one rule for them, another for us.
"He accused me of hasty generalization based on three examples, then generalized about my entire argument from one comment. That's Logical Double Standards—his generalization is analysis; mine is fallacy. The standard isn't logic; it's convenience. Double standards are what happen when logic becomes a jersey you wear, not a game you play."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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Logical Excuse Fallacy

A fallacy where you accuse your opponent of committing logical fallacies specifically to avoid dealing with the content of their arguments. The move uses "that's a fallacy" as a conversation-ender, not a genuine critique. Instead of showing why something is fallacious and what that means, the accuser simply labels and dismisses. The fallacy lies in treating fallacy identification as refutation—as if naming the error does the work of argument. Real fallacy analysis requires showing why the fallacy matters, how it affects the argument, and what remains after it's removed. Logical Excuse Fallacy skips all that and just declares victory.
Logical Excuse Fallacy "He spent the whole debate saying 'that's a straw man,' 'that's ad hominem,' 'that's hasty generalization'—never once engaging what I actually said. That's Logical Excuse Fallacy—using fallacy names as excuses to avoid argument. Real critique engages; labeling just dismisses. The fallacies may have been real; the excuse was the point."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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