Person 1: Who's that over there?
Person 2: Oh thats MR. VALID
Person 1: Isn't he the gayest person alive.
Person 2: Oh thats MR. VALID
Person 1: Isn't he the gayest person alive.
by Matt_Smith_ December 18, 2022
Get the MR. VALID mug.Goofy ahh hoe: Omg my life is so sad I just wanna be loved please please am I cute am I worthy pls pls
Unfortunate Person: Bro you're such a Validation Slave stfu
Unfortunate Person: Bro you're such a Validation Slave stfu
by Poopsock3423423234432 January 2, 2023
Get the Validation Slave mug.A slang term used to describe an individuals' statement if it happens to be factual and can be backed up by evidence and such.
by RealMikeTyson February 27, 2022
Get the On Valid mug.A deliberately lobbed social media post tossed right down the middle, inviting former teammates, casual acquaintances, and long-forgotten rivals to unload a barrage of compliments. Typically disguised as hesitation (e.g., “not sure I wanna but…”) despite the poster refreshing the comments like it’s a tie game in the 7th.
Andrew just threw a Validation Slow Pitch on Facebook, opened with ‘not sure I wanna but…’ and by midnight the comments section looked like a postgame award ceremony.
by Corey Daul February 3, 2026
Get the Validation Slow Pitch mug.The principle that logical validity operates in two modes: absolute validity (an argument that is valid in all logical systems, by any reasonable standard) and relative validity (an argument that is valid within a particular logical framework but may not hold in others). The law acknowledges that some arguments are universally valid—if all humans are mortal and Socrates is human, then Socrates is mortal holds in any logic that includes those rules. Other arguments are valid only within specific systems—a proof that works in classical logic may fail in paraconsistent logic. The law of absolute and relative validity reconciles these by recognizing that validity has both universal and context-dependent dimensions.
Law of Absolute and Relative Logical Validity Example: "They debated whether his argument was valid. He insisted it was absolutely valid (true in any logic). She pointed out it relied on the law of excluded middle, which doesn't hold in intuitionistic logic. The law of absolute and relative validity said: valid in classical logic (relative validity), not universally valid (absolute validity failed). Both were right, which is why logic is complicated."
by Abzugal February 16, 2026
Get the Law of Absolute and Relative Logical Validity mug.The principle that logical validity exists on a spectrum between absolute and relative, with infinite gradations and multiple dimensions. Under this law, an argument isn't simply valid or invalid—it's valid to some degree, in some logical systems, under some interpretations, for some purposes. The law of spectral validity recognizes that validity is not binary but continuous, that arguments can be more or less valid depending on the standards applied, and that the question isn't "is it valid?" but "where on the spectrum of validity does this argument fall?" This law is essential for understanding debates between different logical frameworks, where each side's arguments are valid within their own system but may appear invalid in another.
Law of Spectral Logical Validity Example: "She evaluated his argument using spectral logical validity, mapping it across multiple dimensions: validity in classical logic (high), validity in paraconsistent logic (medium), validity in fuzzy logic (depends on truth values), validity in everyday reasoning (pretty good). The spectral coordinates explained why the argument worked for some audiences and failed for others. She stopped calling it invalid and started understanding where it lived."
by Abzugal February 16, 2026
Get the Law of Spectral Logical Validity mug.