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Trivialization of Debunking

The reduction of debunking to trivial, superficial, or performative acts that miss the deeper issues. When debunking becomes routine, it loses its power—it becomes about catching people in minor errors, mocking small inconsistencies, performing superiority over trivial targets. The Trivialization of Debunking means that debunking is applied everywhere and anywhere, regardless of stakes or significance. Every claim must be fact-checked; every metaphor must be literalized; every approximation must be corrected. The result is not greater truth but greater noise—a culture of pedantry dressed as rigor.
"She corrected his metaphor about 'chemical imbalance' because 'technically, everything is chemicals.' That's the Trivialization of Debunking—using debunking to feel smart, not to find truth. The metaphor was fine; the point was clear. But debunking has become a reflex, not a tool. When everything is debunked, nothing is illuminated."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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A form of bias and meta-bias where one dismisses another person's views, disagreements, or different perspectives by casually labeling them as mentally ill, unstable, schizophrenic, delusional, or otherwise pathological. The bias trivializes genuine mental health conditions while weaponizing them against anyone who disagrees. It's the logic of "you must be crazy to believe that" applied to every difference of opinion. Pathology Trivialization Bias allows its user to dismiss any challenge without engagement, to pathologize dissent rather than address it. It's especially common in online arguments, where "touch grass," "seek help," and "you're clearly mentally ill" serve as conversation-enders that require no thought, only dismissal.
Pathology Trivialization Bias Example: "She presented a well-reasoned argument for electoral reform. He responded with Pathology Trivialization Bias: 'You're clearly delusional. Have you tried medication?' Her arguments went unaddressed, her reasoning unchallenged—just dismissed as symptom. The bias had done its work: turning disagreement into disease, dissent into diagnosis. She wasn't wrong; she was just 'crazy'—which meant nothing she said mattered."
by Dumu The Void February 20, 2026
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