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The application of a cold, pseudo-logical deduction to argue that victims of anti-communist persecution were, in fact, architects of their own fate. It constructs syllogisms based on the premise that communism is an inherent threat, therefore anyone associated with it logically forfeited their rights or safety. It frames persecution as a predictable, even legally sound, consequence of the victim's own ideological choices.
Logicalization against the Victims of Anti-communism Example: "Premise 1: The Communist Party advocated for the overthrow of the government. Premise 2: You were a member or sympathizer. Conclusion: Therefore, your blacklisting, deportation, or imprisonment was not persecution, but a logical and legal consequence of your subversive allegiance." This logicalization uses a political premise as an axiomatic truth to "prove" that victims were not wronged, but merely experienced the logical outcome of their own dangerous beliefs.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
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Logical Ping-Pong Game Bias

The tendency of a debate to devolve into a rapid, sterile exchange of formal logical charges ("straw man!" "non sequitur!" "ad hominem!") where scoring points on procedural grounds replaces engagement with substance. The "bias" is towards valuing the form of the argument as a game, making it impossible to discuss the underlying issue.
Logical Ping-Pong Game Bias Example: Two people debating economics rapidly descend into: "That's an anecdotal fallacy!" "You're attacking a straw man of my position!" "Your premise is circular!" The discussion dies as they become referees of a logical ping-pong game, more focused on catching each other's rhetorical fouls than on understanding the economic policy.
by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026
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Logical Bias

The fallacy of believing that a conclusion derived from a formally valid logical structure is necessarily true or meaningful in the real world. This bias venerates the syntactic correctness of an argument while being blind to the factual inaccuracy of its premises or its deliberate abstraction from reality. Perfect logic, perfectly wrong.
Example: "Premise 1: All birds can fly. Premise 2: A penguin is a bird. Conclusion: Therefore, penguins can fly." The logical bias is the insistence that the airtight logic of the syllogism somehow challenges biological reality, or that pointing out the false premise is "cheating" at the logical game. Form is prized over substance.
by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026
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Logical Double Standards

The meta-fallacy of applying different logical standards to different participants in a discussion, typically demanding impeccable reasoning from your opponent while allowing yourself hand-waving, gut feelings, and outright contradictions. Logical double standards are the rhetorical equivalent of a tennis match where one player's shots must land inside the lines and the other's can land anywhere in the county. This fallacy is how someone can demand "proof" for climate change while accepting election fraud claims based on a single Facebook post, or require their opponent to cite peer-reviewed studies while offering their own opinions as self-evident truth. The double standard is invisible to the person wielding it, which is what makes it so effective and so infuriating.
Example: "The logical double standards were staggering. She had to provide sources for every claim; he could say 'everyone knows' and it was accepted. She had to address every point; he could ignore hers and repeat his. When she pointed out the double standard, he said that was just her opinion. The standards weren't double; they were whatever allowed him to feel right."
by Dumu The Void February 15, 2026
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A logical framework that acknowledges no boundaries on the spectra of reasoning—truth, validity, soundness, and rationality all exist on continua that extend infinitely in all directions, with no cutoff points, no thresholds, and no categories. In an unlimited spectrum system, nothing is simply "true" or "false"; everything has a truth-value somewhere on an infinite scale. Nothing is purely "logical" or "illogical"; everything participates in logicality to some degree. This system is maximally inclusive, maximally nuanced, and maximally useless for making decisions, which require cutoffs. The logical system of unlimited spectrum is beloved by philosophers and despised by anyone who just needs a yes/no answer.
Example: "He tried to use a logical system of unlimited spectrum to decide whether to accept a job offer. The offer was neither good nor bad but existed somewhere on an infinite spectrum of job-quality, with infinite factors, infinite gradations, and no clear threshold for acceptance. Six months later, he was still analyzing, the job was filled, and the spectrum had expanded to include 'missed opportunities.'"
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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A logical framework that acknowledges spectra but imposes boundaries, thresholds, and categories for practical decision-making. In a limited spectrum system, truth exists on a continuum, but we agree that above a certain threshold we'll call it "true" and below another we'll call it "false." Reason exists on a spectrum, but we establish criteria for what counts as "valid" for purposes of argument. The logical system of limited spectrum is a compromise between the infinite nuance of reality and the human need for categories. It's the logic of "close enough for government work," of "beyond a reasonable doubt," of "statistically significant." It acknowledges that our categories are arbitrary but necessary—that we must draw lines even though the lines are never quite right.
Example: "She applied a logical system of limited spectrum to her dating life. Instead of asking 'is he perfect?' (infinite spectrum, impossible answer), she asked 'does he meet my threshold for kindness, stability, and not leaving socks everywhere?' The thresholds were arbitrary, the spectrum was limited, but she could actually make a decision. She said yes to the guy, no to the socks, and the system worked."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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A logical framework that keeps its spectra open to new dimensions, new gradations, and new possibilities—refusing to close off the possibility that new forms of logic, new modes of reasoning, or new truth-values might emerge. An open spectrum system welcomes contributions from different cultures, different eras, different species, and different intelligences (human, animal, artificial). It doesn't assume that all logical possibilities have been discovered or that current categories are final. The logical system of open spectrum is humble, curious, and permanently unfinished—always ready to expand to accommodate the new, the strange, and the previously unthinkable.
Example: "He encountered an AI that reasoned in ways no human could follow—not illogically, but according to patterns that didn't map onto human logical categories. Instead of dismissing it as broken, he invoked the logical system of open spectrum, expanding his framework to include machine reasoning as a new dimension. The AI appreciated being understood. He appreciated having his mind blown."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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