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Meta-Rationality

The application of rational principles to the question of when and how to be rational. It recognizes that blind adherence to formal logic or cold cost-benefit analysis can be irrational in contexts involving human values, emotions, or deep uncertainty. Meta-rationality chooses the appropriate cognitive tool for the job, knowing that sometimes intuition, storytelling, or moral commitment are more "rational" paths to good outcomes than pure deduction. It's rationality about rationality.
Example: Deciding to trust your gut feeling about a person's character, despite a clean resume and logical pitch, is an act of Meta-Rationality. You recognize that your subconscious pattern-recognition for deceit is a valid data-processing system in social contexts, and that an overly analytical approach here would be less rational because it ignores a powerful evolved tool.
by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026
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Rationalized Bias

A sophisticated form of self-deception where one's pre-existing prejudices, desires, or ideological commitments are retroactively supported by elaborate, internally consistent rationalizations. The person constructs a logical-sounding edifice to justify a conclusion they arrived at for emotional or tribal reasons, believing themselves to be purely rational. The bias lies in the motivated reasoning that builds the rationale.
Example: A person opposed to immigration reform crafts a complex argument citing selective economic studies, abstract principles of sovereignty, and crime statistics. This Rationalized Bias allows them to believe their stance is reasoned, when its roots are in unexamined cultural anxiety and identity politics. The logic serves the bias, not the truth.
by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026
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Rationalization of Evil

The psychological process of concocting emotionally plausible, self-serving excuses to justify one's own or one's group's harmful, cruel, or immoral actions. It uses the language of reason—practical necessity, greater good, victim-blaming, or righteous retaliation—to evade moral responsibility and soothe cognitive dissonance. The rationale is crafted after the decision to do harm, not as its guide.
Example: A colonial administrator rationalizing the exploitation of a colony might tell himself, "We're bringing them civilization and saving them from themselves. It's for their own good, even if they don't understand it yet." This Rationalization of Evil dresses up greed and violence in the noble costume of a "civilizing mission."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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