The bias where one assumes that their facts are simply factual—not selected, not interpreted, not framed, but just facts. Factuality Bias ignores that facts are always chosen (these facts matter, those don't), always framed (this context, not that), always presented from a perspective (here, not there). The bias treats facts as self-evident, self-explanatory, self-sufficient—when in reality, facts are always interpreted, always situated, always partial. Factuality Bias is what makes people say "just look at the facts" as if facts didn't need looking at, as if they spoke for themselves.
Example: "She presented her facts as if they were simply 'the facts.' Factuality Bias meant she never had to explain why these facts, why now, why in this order. They were just facts—self-evident, self-sufficient. When he pointed out that other facts existed, that the same facts could be interpreted differently, she dismissed him as 'denying facts.' She wasn't wrong; she was just incomplete."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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grounded in truth in a way that is impressive, undeniable, and impactful. A blend of “factual” and
“sensational.
grounded in truth in a way that is impressive, undeniable, and impactful. A blend of “factual” and
“sensational.
“Her presentation on climate change wasn’t just informative — it was factsational, leaving everyone both enlightened and inspired.”
by Kenant Pierre February 22, 2026
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The belief that if you simply state enough discrete, verifiable facts, you have delivered objective truth—as if facts interpret themselves. The Factual Objectivist floods conversations with data points, assuming that the sheer weight of correct information will inevitably lead everyone to the same conclusion. They miss that facts are always selected, framed, and connected by someone with a perspective. Two people can agree on every fact and still disagree violently about what those facts mean. But the Factual Objectivist treats meaning as something that automatically falls out of facts, like water from a cloud.
"I've given you seventeen statistics about crime rates, so my point is proven," she said, unaware that her selection of statistics and her interpretation of their significance were doing all the work. Factual Objectivity Bias: drowning in data while starving for wisdom.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 22, 2026
Get the Factual Objectivity Bias mug.a mispelling of facts, used when you are typing in a hurry because of such overwhelming agreement to a statement
by hiimawseoms201 February 26, 2026
Get the factras mug.Also known as the factual fallacy, hyperrealistic fallacy, "real world" fallacy, factchuck, realitychuck, or "reality" fallacy—offering dogmatic, closed-minded claims about "facts" and "reality" in a way that treats them as self-evident, unquestionable, and beyond interpretation. The fallacy involves treating one's own interpretation of facts as the facts themselves, dismissing other perspectives as out of touch with "reality." It often includes double standards: my facts are real, your facts are ideology. The fallacy is fundamentalist in structure—it elevates a particular view of reality to the status of reality itself, then uses that elevation to dismiss all alternatives.
"I'm just dealing with facts, not your ideology!" they announced, while presenting cherry-picked data with clear bias. That's Facts to Facts Fallacy—using "facts" as a shield against having to examine your own assumptions. Facts are real; treating your interpretation of them as Reality Itself is not."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
Get the Facts to Facts Fallacy mug.A philosophical framework holding that facts are context-dependent—that what counts as a fact, how facts are established, and what facts mean vary with the context of inquiry, the standards of evidence, and the frameworks within which they are produced. Factual contextualism challenges the view of facts as brute, context-free givens. A fact in physics (a particle's position) depends on measurement context; a fact in history (a date) depends on documentary context; a fact in law (guilt) depends on procedural context. Contextualism doesn't deny that facts are real; it insists that facts are always facts-in-context, and that extracting them from context distorts their meaning. It demands that we attend to the conditions that make facts possible and recognize that what we call "fact" is always situated.
Example: "His factual contextualism meant he didn't treat 'the facts' as self-evident. He asked: in what context were these facts produced? What assumptions went into gathering them? What was left out?"
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
Get the Factual Contextualism mug.A philosophical framework holding that facts are shaped by multiple, irreducible contexts—scientific, historical, social, cultural, institutional—that interact to constitute what counts as fact. A single event is a fact in a meteorological context, a fact in an economic context, a fact in a political context, a fact in a personal context, each context producing different factual descriptions that are not reducible to one another. Factual multicontextualism insists that no single context exhausts the reality of facts and that understanding factual claims requires mapping how contexts interrelate. It demands that we resist the temptation to reduce facts to any one framework (e.g., science) and instead embrace the multiplicity of contexts that give facts meaning.
Example: "Her factual multicontextualism meant she studied a natural disaster not just as a meteorological fact, but also as a social fact, an economic fact, a political fact, and a personal fact—all of which were true and all of which were needed to understand what happened."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026