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Savvas Realize

A fucking shitty ass math program that hates everyone
Your answer: a-6=π
Savvas Realize answer: A-6=π
by Lalalemon6669991234567890 January 6, 2025
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Cognitive Realism

The position that our internal cognitive representations (concepts, schemas, mental models) accurately mirror the external world. Our minds are like maps that, while not perfect, are fundamentally aligned with the territory. Truth is about correspondence between thought and reality, and through reason and perception, we can progressively refine our maps to be more accurate.
Cognitive Realism believes that the concept of "tree" in your mind, while simplified, corresponds to an actual class of objects with shared properties (roots, trunk, leaves) that exist independently of you. Scientific models, like the heliocentric solar system, are triumphantly realistic maps that displaced less accurate ones (geocentrism). When you learn a new fact and update your belief, you're moving your cognitive map closer to reality.
by Abzugal January 24, 2026
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Meta-Reality

The concept that what we perceive as base reality might itself be a construct, simulation, or narrative layer within a larger, truer reality. It’s the philosophical and sometimes psychedelic suspicion that we’re not at the bottom level of existence. This includes simulation theory, the idea that gods are themselves created, or that our universe is a thought in a meta-mind. It’s reality questioning its own reality, leading to a dizzying sense that everything, including the rules of physics, might be local software.
Example: "After his DMT trip, he couldn't stop talking about meta-reality. 'Our world is just the dream of a sleeping giant,' he'd say, 'and its alarm clock is the heat death of the universe. Also, the giant is allergic to peanuts, which is why they're deadly.' It made existential dread feel weirdly specific."
by Dumu The Void January 30, 2026
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Cognitive Realism

The philosophical hypothesis that our perception of reality isn't a perfect mirror of the world, but a limited, processed construction built by our brains. It argues that our nervous systems act as a filter and an interpreter, shaping what we can see, hear, and understand. The "realism" part acknowledges an external world exists, but our access to it is always mediated by our cognitive machinery. This theory has a spectrum: a Weak Version (Cognitive Relativism) suggests our biology heavily influences our reality, while a Strong Version (Cognitive Determinism) argues it dictates and limits what reality can even be for us.
*Example: "Looking at a rainbow, Cognitive Realism kicks in. The rainbow 'out there' is just water droplets refracting white light. But my primate brain, equipped with only three types of color cones, constructs the bands of ROYGBIV. A mantis shrimp, with 16 color cones, would perceive a rainbow of unimaginable complexity. My reality isn't false, but it's a profoundly limited, biologically-determined sketch of what's actually there."*
by Abzunammu February 2, 2026
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Pragmatic Realism

The viewpoint that there is a mind-independent reality, but our access to it and our descriptions of it are always mediated by our practical interests, cognitive tools, and languages. Therefore, "truth" is the set of beliefs that, at a given time, best enables us to cope with and predict the behavior of that reality. It's a realism tempered by pragmatism: the world is real, but our maps of it are judged by how well they help us travel.
Pragmatic Realism Example: A Pragmatic Realist scientist believes quarks are real features of the universe, not just useful fictions. However, they also acknowledge that our "quark" model is a human construct that works stunningly well for prediction and engineering. If a better, more useful model emerges, they would abandon the old one, confident we are getting closer to the reality, but never claiming to have the final, perfect picture.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 3, 2026
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Arbitrary Reality Fallacy

The logical error in which something is considered true or false based on arbitrary, often self-serving criteria rather than evidence or consistent standards. This fallacy is rampant in politics and economics, where the same person will demand "rigorous proof" for climate science while accepting election fraud claims based on a single Twitter post. Truth becomes a menu: you pick what you want to believe, and reality is just whatever supports your side. The arbitrary reality fallacy is how people can look at the same economy and one sees booming success while another sees crushing failure—both are looking, neither is using a consistent measuring stick, and both are convinced the other is delusional.
Example: "He used the arbitrary reality fallacy in every argument. When she cited unemployment statistics, he said government data was fake. When she cited private research, he said it was biased. When she cited his own previous statements, he said he'd been misquoted. Reality, for him, was whatever allowed him to win the argument. She stopped arguing, because you can't debate someone who brings their own facts and changes them as needed."
by Dumu The Void February 15, 2026
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Illogical Reality Theory

The extension of Illogical Universe Theory to reality as a whole—the claim that reality, in its full depth, includes contradictions, paradoxes, and phenomena that resist logical systematization. Reality may not be a logical system; it may be a messy, layered, self-contradictory tapestry that logic can only partially map. Illogical Reality Theory doesn't abandon logic—it abandons the assumption that reality must be logical. Logic remains useful, but as a tool, not as a mirror. Reality may be bigger than logic, stranger than consistency, deeper than non-contradiction.
Illogical Reality Theory "Your philosophical system demands consistency. But look at your own life—you hold contradictory beliefs, feel conflicting emotions, act against your own interests. Illogical Reality Theory says: that's not failure; that's reality. Consistency is a human demand, not a cosmic given. Reality includes contradiction; your logic just has to deal."
by Dumu The Void March 1, 2026
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