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The principle that two statements can contradict each other in some dimensions of truth while aligning in others, making contradiction a matter of degree and dimension rather than an absolute. Under this law, "the economy is strong" and "the economy is weak" can both be true—strong for some people, weak for others; strong on some metrics, weak on others; strong in some regions, weak elsewhere. The contradiction isn't total; it's dimensional. The law of possible truth contradiction allows for nuanced understanding of complex realities where simple true/false binaries fail.
Example: "They argued about whether the city was safe. She said yes (her neighborhood was fine). He said no (his neighborhood had issues). Both were true—on different spectra, in different dimensions. The law of possible truth contradiction allowed them to stop fighting about who was right and start talking about why their experiences differed. Progress."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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The principle that between any two opposing truth claims lies not just a middle ground but an infinite spectrum of possible truths that participate in both sides while being reducible to neither. Under this law, the middle isn't a compromise position—it's a vast territory of possibilities. Between "he loves me" and "he loves me not" lies not just "he loves me sometimes" but infinite variations: loves me in some ways, not in others; loves me conditionally; loves the idea of me; loves me but can't show it; loves me and also loves someone else; loves me in a way I don't recognize. The possible middle truth is where most of life actually happens—the binary poles are just the distant edges of a vast spectrum.
Example: "She asked if her job was fulfilling. Binary truth said yes or no. The law of the possible middle truth opened infinity: fulfilling in some moments, draining in others; fulfilling the mission, not the paycheck; fulfilling her skills, not her soul; fulfilling compared to past jobs, not compared to dreams. The truth was in the possible middle, not the poles. She stopped asking yes/no and started mapping the spectrum."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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Law of the Possible Ad Hoc

The principle that ad hoc constructions are always possible—there is always some explanation, some solution, some argument that can be devised for the specific case, regardless of whether it generalizes. The law acknowledges human creativity: faced with a novel situation, we can always invent something that addresses it, even if that something has no broader application. This is the source of both human ingenuity (we can solve unprecedented problems) and human folly (we can justify anything). The law of the possible ad hoc reminds us that possibility is not the same as validity—just because we can invent an ad hoc explanation doesn't mean it's true.
Example: "He needed an excuse for missing the deadline and, applying the law of the possible ad hoc, invented one on the spot—a family emergency, a computer crash, a mysterious illness. It was possible, plausible, and completely fabricated. The law said: ad hoc is always possible. His boss said: next time, plan better. Both were right."
by Dumu The Void February 17, 2026
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The principle that for any argument, it is possible to interpret it as fallacious—there is always some way to apply a fallacy label, regardless of the argument's actual merit. The law acknowledges that fallacy-mongering is infinite: given enough creativity, you can find an ad hominem, a straw man, a slippery slope in any discourse. This possibility doesn't mean all arguments are fallacious; it means fallacy labeling is not objective. It's a rhetorical move, not a logical judgment. The law of the possible fallacies warns against the weaponization of fallacy terminology—just because you can call something a fallacy doesn't mean it is one.
Example: "He could find a fallacy in any argument, no matter how sound. Straw man? You're oversimplifying. Ad hominem? You're attacking the person. Slippery slope? You're predicting disaster. The law of the possible fallacies explained: it's always possible to see a fallacy if you want to. The question was whether the fallacy was real or just his imagination."
by Dumu The Void February 17, 2026
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The metaphysical and logical framework proposing that two contradictory statements can both be true—not in the same sense, at the same time, from the same perspective, but across different dimensions, contexts, or frames of reference. The theory acknowledges that reality is complex enough to encompass apparent opposites: love and hate can coexist, success and failure can be simultaneous, order and chaos can be two faces of the same process. The Theory of Possible Contradiction doesn't reject logic; it expands it, recognizing that binary truth-values are insufficient for a world where most important truths are multidimensional. This theory is the foundation of dialectical thinking, of mystical paradox, of any worldview that embraces complexity rather than reducing it.
Example: "She loved her job and hated it—loved the work, hated the politics; loved the mission, hated the hours. The Theory of Possible Contradiction said: both true, in different dimensions. She wasn't confused; she was honest. Contradiction wasn't a problem to solve; it was a reality to accept."
by Dumu The Void February 18, 2026
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The logical principle that contradictions are possible—that two opposing statements can both be true in different respects, from different perspectives, or at different levels of analysis. This principle challenges the classical law of non-contradiction (which says something cannot both be and not be in the same sense) by noting that "in the same sense" is doing crucial work. Different senses allow different truths. The Principle of Possible Contradiction is essential for understanding complex systems, where A can cause B and B can cause A, where order emerges from chaos, where love includes hate. It's the principle that lets us hold multiple perspectives without mental collapse, that allows wisdom to embrace paradox rather than flee from it.
Example: "He was both confident and terrified before his presentation—confident in his preparation, terrified of the audience. The Principle of Possible Contradiction said: both real, both true, both him. He didn't need to resolve the contradiction; he needed to perform with it. He did, and both feelings proved justified."
by Dumu The Void February 18, 2026
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A framework for evaluating the plausibility and probability of phenomena that seem supernatural, paranormal, or otherwise beyond ordinary explanation—such as spiritual experiences with gods (dreams, visions, visitations), levitation when no one is watching, or other anomalous events. The law proposes that such phenomena should not be dismissed outright but evaluated along multiple dimensions: internal consistency (does the account make sense on its own terms?), external coherence (does it align with known facts?), source reliability (is the witness credible?), and explanatory power (does it explain what needs explaining?). The law also acknowledges that probability is not static—what seems impossible today may become plausible tomorrow as understanding expands. The Law of Plausibility and Possible Probability doesn't prove such phenomena real; it provides a framework for taking them seriously without requiring belief.
Example: "She'd had vivid dreams of a goddess for years—not hallucinations but experiences, real to her, transformative. Skeptics dismissed them as imagination. The Law of Plausibility and Possible Probability offered another view: internally consistent, externally coherent with her life, source reliable (her own experience), explanatory (it explained her peace). Not proof, but plausibility. She didn't need belief; she needed the space to consider that some things might be real even if unproven."
by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
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