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Closed Logical System

A logical framework that is closed to external influence—its axioms are fixed, its rules are unchanging, and no new information or perspective can alter its operations. Closed logical systems are characteristic of mathematics (within a given axiomatic system), of formal logic (within a given calculus), and of rigid ideologies (within a given framework). They're clean, consistent, and predictable—and completely unable to learn or adapt. Closed systems are useful for certain purposes (formal proofs, computer programs) but disastrous for understanding a changing world. When applied to life, they produce certainty without wisdom, stability without growth.
Example: "Her mind was a closed logical system—axioms fixed decades ago, rules unchanging, no new information allowed. Arguments bounced off, evidence dissolved, experience meant nothing. The system was consistent, perfectly consistent, and perfectly useless for navigating a changing world. She was never wrong and never learned."
by Abzugal February 17, 2026
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concept by logical

Concept by Logical Means that anything Logical makes is absolutely fye no questions asked it also means that marston is still a virgin
Concept by logical is too fye bro
by astroboymcsuckurnan August 30, 2018
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The frustrating reality that identifying a logical fallacy in someone's argument does not automatically prove their conclusion wrong, nor does it validate your own. Fallacies are flaws in reasoning, not truth detectors. The "hard problem" is the temptation to use fallacy labels (e.g., "that's just an ad hominem!") as a rhetorical knockout punch, ending the discussion while providing zero substantive counter-argument. This reduces critical thinking to a game of fallacy bingo, where the goal is to spot errors rather than collaboratively pursue truth. A conclusion reached via fallacious reasoning can still be accidentally true, and a logically pristine argument can lead to a false conclusion if its premises are wrong.
Example: Person A: "We should fix the bridge. The engineer who designed it is a known liar!" Person B: "Ad hominem fallacy! Invalid argument, the bridge is fine." B has correctly spotted a fallacy (attacking the person, not the bridge's condition), but has done nothing to assess the actual safety of the bridge. The hard problem: Winning the logical battle doesn't win the factual war. The bridge might still be crumbling, but the conversation is now dead, replaced by a smug scorecard of who used logic correctly. Hard Problem of Logical Fallacies.
by Dumuabzu January 25, 2026
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Also known as the Fallacy Fallacy Problem: The self-defeating mistake of dismissing an argument solely because it contains a logical fallacy. This is the meta-error where calling out a fallacy becomes a fallacy itself (argument from fallacy). It assumes that if the reasoning is flawed, the conclusion must be false. This creates a logical trap where any critique can be infinitely regressed: "You used a fallacy to point out my fallacy, so your critique is invalid!" It turns discourse into a hall of mirrors where the act of policing logic destroys the possibility of communication.
Example: Alex: "Climate change is real because 99% of scientists say so, and you're a oil shill for denying it!" (This commits an appeal to authority and an ad hominem). Blake: "Ha! You used two fallacies! Therefore, climate change isn't real!" Blake has committed the fallacy fallacy. Alex's conclusion (climate change is real) is supported by massive evidence independent of their flawed reasoning. Dismissing the conclusion because of the poor argument is a critical failure. The hard problem: Spotting fallacies is easy; knowing what to do with that information without committing a greater error is the real intellectual work. Hard Problem of Logical Fallacy Fallacies.
by Dumuabzu January 25, 2026
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This theory dissects how the language and prestige of formal logic are used as a social weapon to enforce conformity and dismiss dissent. It argues that appeals to "logic" and "rationality" are often culturally loaded and deployed to pathologize alternative viewpoints—especially emotional, intuitive, or culturally specific ones—as "illogical" or "irrational," thereby excluding them from serious discourse and legitimizing the status quo.
Theory of Logical Social Control Example: In a corporate meeting, a woman's proposal is dismissed by a male colleague who says, "Let's stick to the logical facts, not feelings," after she raised concerns about team morale. This is logical social control. He weaponizes a narrow, hyper-formal definition of "logic" to delegitimize her valid, experience-based argument, framing his position as objectively superior and reinforcing a gendered hierarchy of discourse.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 7, 2026
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Theory of Logical Hegemony

The critical theory proposing that dominant groups maintain power not just through force or economics, but through control over what counts as "logical" in the first place. According to this theory, the rules of logic aren't universal and neutral—they're tools of hegemony, designed to privilege certain ways of thinking while marginalizing others. Western logic (non-contradiction, excluded middle, linear reasoning) becomes the standard against which all other reasoning is judged, making indigenous epistemologies, feminine modes of thought, and non-Western philosophies appear "illogical" simply because they operate by different rules. The theory of logical hegemony explains why "that doesn't make sense" often really means "that doesn't fit my cultural framework," and why marginalized groups are constantly forced to translate their experiences into dominant logical forms to be heard.
Example: "She invoked the theory of logical hegemony when her professor dismissed indigenous knowledge as 'unscientific.' 'You're not evaluating their logic,' she said. 'You're imposing yours. The hegemony of Western rationality decides what counts as knowledge, and everything else gets called myth.' The professor said she was being relativistic. She said he was being hegemonic. Neither convinced the other, but she felt better for naming it."
by Dumu The Void February 15, 2026
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Theory of Logical Paradigms

The meta-theoretical framework proposing that logic itself operates within paradigms—historically situated frameworks that determine what counts as valid reasoning, what counts as evidence, and what counts as a conclusion. Just as scientific paradigms shift (Newton to Einstein), logical paradigms shift too, meaning that what was perfectly logical in one era becomes questionable in the next. The theory of logical paradigms explains why medieval scholars could logically prove the existence of God using premises everyone accepted, while modern logicians reject those same proofs as unsound. It's not that logic changed; it's that the paradigm within which logic operates shifted, taking the ground rules with it. Understanding logical paradigms means recognizing that your ironclad argument might be ironclad only within a framework that others don't share.
Example: "He tried to win an argument with his religious grandmother using modern scientific logic. She responded with logic from her paradigm—scripture, tradition, revelation. He cited studies; she cited Psalms. Neither was irrational; they were operating in different logical paradigms. The theory of logical paradigms explained the impasse but didn't resolve it. They agreed to disagree, which was the only logical move available."
by Dumu The Void February 15, 2026
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