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Special Logic

Creating a unique, ad-hoc, or personalized set of logical rules to defend a predetermined conclusion, especially when applied to a special case dear to the arguer. This logic often contradicts the general logic they apply to everything else and is immune to standard counter-argument.
Example: "He deployed special logic for his favorite politician: 'Sure, taking undisclosed money is corruption for others, but for him, it's just building pragmatic relationships to get things done for people like us.' The rules of cause, effect, and ethics were specially rewritten for that one person."
by AbzuInExile January 31, 2026
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Bending Logic

The deliberate, often sneaky, distortion of logical rules and structures to make an invalid argument appear valid. This involves misapplying logical operators, creating false dichotomies, using equivocation (changing the meaning of a word mid-argument), or crafting syllogisms with hidden, untrue premises. It's not being bad at logic; it's being a con artist with logic as your prop.
Example: "He defended his conspiracy theory by bending logic: 'Either you believe the official report, or you seek the truth. You're criticizing my search for truth. Therefore, you must believe the official report.' He'd bent a complex situation into a forced binary choice, making skepticism look like blind faith."
by AbzuInExile January 31, 2026
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Meta-Logical Closed Systems

A system that takes logical systems themselves as its objects of study, but does so from a fixed, immutable perspective. It is a "closed theory about logic." For example, a specific, dogmatic philosophy of mathematics that definitively states what mathematics is (e.g., "Mathematics is nothing but the manipulation of symbols according to formal rules") and refuses to consider alternative philosophies (e.g., intuitionism, realism) is a meta-logical closed system.
Meta-Logical Closed Systems Example: Strict Logical Positivism, with its verifiability principle of meaning, acted as a Meta-Logical Closed System. It declared that any statement not empirically verifiable or analytically true was literally meaningless. This meta-framework itself was not open to empirical verification, making it a self-sealing, closed system for judging all other forms of discourse and logic.
by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026
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Meta-Logical Open Systems

A reflective, evolving framework for understanding the nature, foundations, and plurality of logic itself. It acknowledges that different logical systems (classical, fuzzy, paraconsistent, intuitionistic) may be useful for different domains or problems. It is open to revising its understanding of what logic is based on insights from cognitive science, computer science, and philosophy. It treats logic not as a singular, sacred monolith, but as a toolkit of reasoning styles.
Meta-Logical Open Systems Example: The modern field of philosophical logic, which compares classical logic to non-classical logics suitable for handling vagueness, paradoxes, or quantum phenomena, operates as a Meta-Logical Open System. It doesn't seek the "One True Logic," but explores a landscape of possible logics, open to the idea that our reasoning tools must adapt to the complexities of the world and mind.
by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026
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Chris logic

an average guy with uncommon logic. When a guy is making a decision that has no rational justification and causes you frustration because he doesn't see that 99.9% of people see.
Chris logic is to purchase 3 donuts instead of splitting a dozen with 3 friends who each want 3 and saving money.

Chris logic is to rent out a single bedroom for $2500 to a traveling nurse when a whole apartment near him rents for that price.
by PuzzlesAndChill February 5, 2026
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Social Logicism

1. The Academic Definition:
Social logicism is the interdisciplinary study of how formal logic and social structures interact. It examines two main things: first, how logical frameworks (like game theory, set theory, or rational choice models) can be applied to analyze social phenomena—think mapping the "logic" of institutional rules, online echo chambers, or collective decision-making. Second, and more critically, it investigates how the rhetoric of universal logic and rationality is socially used in practice. This means studying how appeals to "cold, hard logic" are often culturally loaded and deployed to legitimize certain viewpoints while discrediting others, frequently along lines of power, race, gender, or class. It asks: Whose reasoning gets labeled "irrational"? When is a logical framework a useful tool, and when is it a cultural weapon?
· Example (Application): A researcher uses network theory and logical rules of contagion to model how misinformation spreads virally in a social media ecosystem, identifying key logical nodes (like influencers) where interventions might be most effective.
· Example (Critical Analysis): In a corporate meeting, a proposal from the predominantly female marketing team is dismissed as "emotionally driven" and "illogical" by a male-dominated executive team insisting on "just the data." Social logicism would analyze this as a social use of "logic" to devalue contributions from a specific group, upholding a gendered hierarchy where their form of reasoning is defined as the universal standard.
by Dumuabzu February 6, 2026
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Social Logicism

2. The Weaponized Definition (More Common on the Street):
This is the cringey, often online, behavior of treating formal logic as a social super-weapon and the ultimate measure of human worth. It's the belief that all social, political, and moral problems are merely logic puzzles; that if you just construct a perfect syllogism, you can "solve" racism, "disprove" transgender identities, or "defeat" any opponent in debate. It reduces human experience, emotion, culture, and systemic injustice to flawed premises waiting to be corrected by a "rational" mind (almost always the speaker's). This view trivializes lived reality and is a classic tool for sealioning, tone-policing ("you're too emotional to be logical"), and maintaining privilege by setting up a game where only one side's tools are allowed.
Social Logicism Example: A person argues online that systemic racism doesn't exist because "logically, if the law is race-blind, then outcomes are based on merit." They dismiss centuries of historical context, implicit bias, and sociological data as "illogical feelings," believing their clean, abstract deduction overrides the messy reality of millions of people. They're not interested in understanding; they're interested in "winning" with what they've labeled as logic.
· Example: In a discussion about healthcare, someone says, "I won't listen to your argument about suffering unless you present it with statistically significant peer-reviewed studies and a formal cost-benefit analysis. Your anecdotes are logically worthless." This weaponizes a narrow form of "logic" to shut down ethical and humanistic discourse, asserting control over what counts as a valid argument.
by Dumuabzu February 6, 2026
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