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Convent way

A notorious presence tied to Convent Way, known more by fear than by faces. They don’t advertise, don’t explain, and don’t need to. The street changes when you step onto it—cars slow down, conversations end, instincts kick in. Locals know better than to stare, ask questions, or linger too long. Nothing loud ever happens, but everyone knows why. Convent Way has a reputation, and it’s carried by the gangsters who run it without ever having to prove they do.
I wouldn’t want to go through convent way, it’s too scary!
by 412 cway January 25, 2026
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Contextualism

The philosophical view that knowledge, truth, and meaning are fundamentally context-dependent—that what counts as true, what counts as known, what counts as meaningful varies with context. Contextualism argues that there is no such thing as truth simpliciter; there is only truth-in-context. A statement can be true in one context, false in another, meaningless in a third. Contextualism doesn't say that truth is arbitrary; it says that truth is always truth-for-some-purpose, truth-under-some-conditions, truth-within-some-framework. It's the philosophy of situational awareness, of the recognition that meaning is made, not found—and made differently in different situations.
Example: "She used to think truth was truth, same everywhere. Contextualism showed her otherwise: 'It's cold' is true in a snowstorm, false in a sauna—same words, different contexts, different truths. Truth wasn't absolute; it was situational. She stopped looking for context-free truth and started paying attention to where she was standing."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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Contextualist Theory

The systematic elaboration of contextualism as a framework for understanding knowledge, truth, and meaning. Contextualist Theory argues that all cognitive claims are context-bound—that the conditions under which a claim is made, the purposes for which it's made, the audience to which it's addressed all shape what the claim means and whether it's true. It develops the implications of this insight across domains: epistemology (knowledge attributions vary with context), semantics (meaning varies with context), ethics (moral judgments vary with context). Contextualist Theory doesn't collapse into relativism because it recognizes that contexts are structured, that some contexts are more appropriate than others, that context-sensitivity is not arbitrariness.
Example: "He'd been frustrated by arguments that seemed to go nowhere. Contextualist Theory showed him why: each person was speaking from a different context, assuming their context was universal. The arguments weren't about truth; they were about which context should prevail. He stopped trying to prove his context right and started explaining where he was standing."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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The recognition that much of what conspiracy theories attribute to secret plots is actually the visible, predictable operation of power in open view. Where conspiracy theorists see hidden cabals, Consent by Power sees institutions functioning as designed: media serving corporate interests, politicians serving donors, police protecting property, courts favoring wealth. It's not a secret because it doesn't need to be—it's how the system works, openly, legally, with public consent manufactured through the very processes conspiracy theories imagine are hidden. The opposite of conspiracy theory isn't "nothing happens"—it's "everything happens exactly as power would predict, and we let it."
Consent by Power (Opposite of Conspiracy Theory) "You think there's a secret committee controlling the media? That's a conspiracy theory. The reality is Consent by Power: media owners openly have interests, openly shape coverage, and we openly consume it. No secret—just power, visible and permitted. The conspiracy isn't hidden; it's hiding in plain sight."
by Dumu The Void February 24, 2026
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Context Drop

Posting something cryptic online that implies a deeper story without explaining it.
That post was a clear context drop. What happened?
by AD_Ridgeport February 28, 2026
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Contestation Bias

A bias where one automatically contests, challenges, or disputes any information that doesn't align with preexisting views. Contestation Bias doesn't just ignore opposing evidence; it actively fights it, demanding impossible standards, shifting goalposts, and finding reasons to reject. It's the bias of perpetual opposition—the mind that says "no" before hearing the question.
"Every study she cited, he contested. Methodology, sample size, funding source—always a reason to reject. Contestation Bias isn't skepticism; it's automatic opposition. Not "show me evidence," but "your evidence is never enough." The contest is the point; truth is secondary."
by Dumu The Void March 4, 2026
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Convention

A group of 7 or more large women working in concert. Possibly dancing
There is a convention on the dancefloor
by The under linker March 14, 2026
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