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The rhetorical move of accusing someone of being into "parascience" as a way of dismissing their experiences, beliefs, or claims without engagement. The accusation positions the target as credulous, unscientific, or mentally unstable. The fallacy lies in using the accusation itself as the argument—as if labeling something "parascience" does the work of refutation. It's a conversation-ender that allows the accuser to feel superior without having to engage the actual phenomena or experiences.
"I tried to explain my meditation experiences and the sense of connection I feel. Response: 'Oh, you're into all that parascience stuff.' That's Parascience Accusation Fallacy—using the label to dismiss, not engaging what I actually said. My experiences are real to me; calling them 'parascience' doesn't make them disappear. It just shows you're not interested in understanding."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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Where-Is-Your-God Fallacy

A dismissive rhetorical move, often used in debates about religion or spirituality, where someone demands physical proof of the divine—"Where is your God? Show me!"—as if the absence of physical evidence proves non-existence. The fallacy lies in demanding a kind of evidence that the claim, by its nature, doesn't offer. Spiritual experiences aren't physical objects; divine reality, if it exists, may not be empirically accessible in the way rocks and trees are. The demand for physical proof of non-physical claims is category error dressed as skepticism.
"I tried to explain my spiritual experiences. Response: 'Where is your God? Show me a photo!' That's Where-Is-Your-God Fallacy—demanding physical evidence for what may not be physical. Spiritual claims aren't scientific hypotheses; they're about meaning, experience, and transcendence. Demanding empirical proof is like demanding to hear a painting. Wrong tool for the domain."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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You-Are-Brainwashed Fallacy

The rhetorical move of accusing someone of being "brainwashed" as a way of dismissing their beliefs, commitments, or arguments without engagement. The accusation positions the target as incapable of independent thought, their views as mere programming. The fallacy lies in using the accusation as a refutation—as if demonstrating that someone is brainwashed (which you haven't actually demonstrated) proves their views are false. But even brainwashed people can hold true beliefs; the source doesn't determine truth. The accusation functions to avoid engagement by pathologizing the believer.
"I explained why I find meaning in my religious community. Response: 'You've just been brainwashed since childhood.' That's You-Are-Brainwashed Fallacy—dismissing my actual reasons by attacking my capacity for reason. Maybe I have thought critically; maybe my commitments are examined. The accusation lets you feel superior without having to engage a single thing I said."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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You-Are-Delusional Fallacy

The rhetorical move of accusing someone of being "delusional" as a way of dismissing their perceptions, experiences, or beliefs without engagement. The accusation positions the target as mentally unstable, their views as symptoms rather than claims. The fallacy lies in using the psychiatric label as a refutation—as if naming a pathology does the work of argument. But even people with delusions can have valid perceptions; more importantly, using "delusional" as a casual dismissal trivializes real mental health issues while avoiding intellectual engagement.
"I shared my near-death experience and what I learned from it. Response: 'You're delusional—that's not real.' That's You-Are-Delusional Fallacy—using a psychiatric label to dismiss an experience without engagement. Maybe it was real; maybe it was brain chemistry; maybe it was something else. But calling me delusional doesn't address any of that—it just ends the conversation while making you feel clinical."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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You-Are-Biased Fallacy

The rhetorical move of accusing someone of being "biased" as a way of dismissing their arguments without engagement. The accusation positions the target as incapable of objectivity, their views as mere prejudice. The fallacy lies in using the accusation as a refutation—as if demonstrating bias (which you haven't actually demonstrated) proves the arguments are wrong. But biased people can make correct arguments; bias doesn't automatically invalidate claims. The accusation functions to avoid engagement by attacking the person's epistemic character.
"I presented evidence about the effectiveness of a social program. Response: 'You're clearly biased—you work in that field.' That's You-Are-Biased Fallacy. Maybe I am biased; that doesn't make the evidence wrong. Engage the evidence, or admit you're not interested. Using bias as a dismissal is just ad hominem with a social science vocabulary."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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The rhetorical move of accusing someone's beliefs, experiences, or arguments of being "schizophrenic" as a way of dismissing them without engagement. The accusation positions the target as mentally ill, their views as symptoms of pathology. The fallacy lies in using a serious psychiatric condition as a casual dismissal—trivializing real mental illness while avoiding intellectual engagement. It's particularly insidious because it weaponizes genuine suffering as a rhetorical tool, using the stigma of mental illness to silence.
"I tried to explain my spiritual experiences and alternative perspectives on consciousness. Response: 'That sounds schizophrenic.' That's This-Is-Schizophrenia Fallacy—using a psychiatric label as a dismissal. Actual schizophrenia is a serious condition; using it as a casual putdown trivializes real suffering while avoiding engagement with ideas. It's not argument—it's stigma as weapon."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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A specific form of the Debunkist Fallacy where someone argues that a claim must be false because it has been debunked by a particular source, authority, or community. "Snopes debunked it," "Science says it's false," "The consensus rejects it." The fallacy lies in appealing to debunking as authority rather than engaging the evidence. Debunking is a process, not a person; it's a claim, not a proof. Citing that something has been debunked doesn't replace showing why it's wrong. The Argument from Debunking is argument from authority dressed in skeptical clothing.
"I pointed out that some alternative health practices have helped people. Response: 'Snopes debunked that years ago.' That's Argument from Debunking Fallacy—appealing to debunking as authority, not engaging the evidence. Snopes can be wrong; debunking can be incomplete; personal experiences don't disappear because a website says so. Debunking is a tool, not a god. Using it as the final word is just another form of argument from authority, with fact-checkers as the new priests."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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