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Framework Bias

A more subtle form of bias where the very structure or "rules of the game" for a debate or investigation are set up to favor a predetermined outcome. It’s not about the evidence itself, but the container you’re forced to put it in. By defining what counts as "valid proof" or "acceptable methodology," you can exclude any evidence that threatens your position before the discussion even begins. It’s rigging the game by controlling the rulebook.
Example: "The debate on economic policy suffered from Framework Bias because they defined 'success' only as GDP growth, completely ignoring environmental or social well-being."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
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Narrative Framework Syndrome

A psychological condition where someone compulsively interprets their life through the lens of literary tropes and storytelling conventions, combined with an obsessive need to fill any gaps in their understanding with elaborate theories that fit these narrative patterns. Common symptoms include categorizing people as character archetypes, expecting plot twists, and creating complex explanations for simple events to avoid "plot holes" in their personal story.
1. "Dude, my roommate has such bad Narrative Framework Syndrome. When our neighbor got a new cat, he spent three hours explaining how it must be a magical familiar sent to watch us because 'that's how these story arcs usually start.'"

2. "My sister's NFS is acting up again. She's convinced her new coworker must be a secret heir to a fortune because 'why else would such an important character be introduced this late in the season?'"
by mKonic February 5, 2025
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Scientific Frameworks

The overarching structures of assumptions, methods, concepts, values, and practices that organize scientific inquiry within particular domains, eras, or communities. Scientific Frameworks are broader than paradigms—they include not just the theoretical commitments of a discipline but also its institutional arrangements, funding patterns, publication norms, and social relations. A framework determines what questions are worth asking, what methods are appropriate for answering them, what counts as evidence, what standards of proof are required, and what kinds of explanations are acceptable. Frameworks can span multiple paradigms—the Newtonian framework persisted through paradigm shifts within it; the Darwinian framework continues to evolve while maintaining core commitments. Understanding Scientific Frameworks is essential for grasping how science actually works: not as a pure logical enterprise but as a human institution shaped by history, culture, and power. Frameworks enable science by providing stability and shared understanding; they also constrain it by limiting what can be thought, asked, or seen.
Example: "He couldn't understand why his radical idea was rejected. Scientific Frameworks explained it: his proposal didn't fit the existing framework—it asked different questions, used different methods, assumed different values. It wasn't that his idea was wrong; it was that it was incommensurable with the framework that dominated his field. He had to either work within the framework or wait for a framework shift."
by Abzugal March 9, 2026
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Epistemological Framework

A foundational structure of assumptions, concepts, standards, and practices that shapes how knowledge is produced, validated, and understood within a particular context. An epistemological framework determines what counts as evidence, what methods are legitimate, what sources are credible, and what constitutes a valid explanation. It's the invisible architecture of knowing—the set of rules, often unstated, that governs how a community decides what it knows. Different cultures, disciplines, and historical periods operate within different epistemological frameworks. A scientist's framework values empirical evidence and peer review; a theologian's framework values scripture and tradition; an indigenous knowledge system values oral transmission and lived experience. None is simply "right" or "wrong"; they're different frameworks for different purposes. Understanding epistemological frameworks is essential for recognizing why people with different backgrounds often talk past each other—they're operating from different assumptions about what knowledge even is.
Example: "They argued for hours about whether the phenomenon was real. He demanded empirical evidence; she offered ancestral testimony. Neither could convince the other because they were operating from different epistemological frameworks—different assumptions about what counts as knowledge, what sources are credible, what evidence means. The framework itself was the barrier, not the evidence."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 9, 2026
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Logical Framework

A structured system of rules, principles, and practices that defines what counts as valid reasoning within a particular context. A logical framework determines which inferences are allowed, what counts as a contradiction, how arguments are evaluated, and what standards of proof apply. Classical logic is one logical framework; intuitionistic logic is another; paraconsistent logic is another; fuzzy logic is another. Each has its own rules, its own domain of applicability, its own strengths and weaknesses. Logical frameworks are not right or wrong in themselves; they're tools for different purposes. Understanding logical frameworks is essential for escaping logical absolutism—the belief that one's own logic is Logic.
Example: "He insisted her reasoning was illogical because it allowed contradictions. She was using a paraconsistent logical framework, designed to handle exactly the kind of contradictory information they were dealing with. Logical frameworks explained the disconnect: they were playing by different rules, both valid for their purposes."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 9, 2026
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Rational Framework

A structured system of assumptions, values, and practices that defines what counts as rational within a particular context. A rational framework determines which beliefs are justified, which methods are appropriate, which goals are reasonable, and which actions are sensible. Different cultures, historical periods, and domains operate within different rational frameworks. What was rational in medieval Europe (belief in witchcraft, bloodletting) is not rational now; what's rational in a scientific laboratory (controlled experiments, statistical significance) differs from what's rational in a courtroom (beyond reasonable doubt, precedent) or in personal relationships (trust, empathy, forgiveness). Understanding rational frameworks is essential for recognizing that rationality is not one thing—that what seems irrational from one framework may be perfectly rational from another.
Example: "He couldn't understand why she stayed in a relationship that seemed obviously bad from his perspective. Rational frameworks explained it: her framework valued loyalty, commitment, and working through difficulty; his valued efficiency, self-interest, and cutting losses. Both were rational within their frameworks; neither could see the other's rationality."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 9, 2026
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Ivory Frameworks

Scientific frameworks understood as a form of ivory culture—the specific theoretical lenses, methodological commitments, and interpretive schemes that structure inquiry, but viewed as instruments of exclusion and control. Where paradigms are the broadest structures, frameworks are the specific tools: particular theories, particular methods, particular assumptions that define what counts as legitimate work in a field. Ivory frameworks are those that have become so dominant, so institutionalized, so protected by powerful communities that they function as gates rather than tools—admission to the community requires adopting them, and refusal means exclusion. The framework becomes ivory when it's no longer a tool for inquiry but a test of loyalty.
Ivory Frameworks Example: "The journal only published work using one particular method—not because other methods couldn't produce knowledge, but because the Ivory Framework had captured the field and made its own tools the only acceptable ones."
by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
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