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Counter-concept

A related, but completely antithetical, concept in regards to the other concept you just defined.
Good is the real counter-concept to evil. It doesn't matter if you understand good and evil as adjectives or nouns.
by Sexydimma June 24, 2024
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Counterpart

one of a legal document's two or more copies.
The attorney meticulously contrasted the contract's signed counterpart with the unsigned copy she kept on file.
by Arminkshipper July 1, 2024
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counter strike trickshot

A thing that beginners can't do on Counterstrike. You have to master the game locations and find the perfect gun for you, which for a lot of snipers it's AWP, and master the trickshot, waiting until someone comes and jumping of your place, catching them off guard
Bro how do you do your counter strike trickshots?
You have to work, I worked 4500 hours for my trickshots, you have to have a good computer
by Papagei July 2, 2024
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Counter-Ragebaitism

Refers to strategies that involve identifying, responding, and preventing "ragebaitism" in order to stop it from thriving on outrage and public frustration.

By SMS-SCHARNHORST
"If ragebait is a corrosive mental phenomenon that feeds on rage and emotional frustration, then starving it of attention, exposing it, and treating it as a joke are essential to Counter-Ragebaitism efforts"

-Konter-Ragebait-Gruppe 10 (KRF 10)
by SMS-SCHARNHORST February 22, 2026
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Counterfactuality

The practice of considering "what if" scenarios—events that did not happen but could have, under different conditions. Counterfactuality is the mental terrain of alternate histories, hypotheticals, and thought experiments. In online political debates, counterfactuals are deployed constantly: "What if the other candidate had won?" "What if this policy had been implemented?" "What if history had gone differently?" The problem is that counterfactuals are unprovable—they can't be empirically verified because they didn't happen. Yet they shape political reasoning profoundly. Counterfactuality is the space between what is and what might have been, a necessary tool for thinking about alternatives and a dangerous weapon for spreading unverifiable claims.
Example: "He spent the entire debate on counterfactuality: 'If we hadn't invaded, things would be better.' 'If the other party had been in power, we'd all be speaking Russian.' None of it could be proven; none of it could be disproven. Counterfactuality had replaced evidence with imagination, and the argument could never end because there was no way to settle it."
by Abzugal March 7, 2026
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Counter-reality

The construction of alternative realities that are presented as if they were true—not hypotheticals but counterfactuals masquerading as facts. Counter-reality is what happens when "what if" becomes "what is" in someone's mind, when imagined alternatives are treated as actual realities. In online political debates, counter-reality is epidemic: people argue about events that never happened as if they did, about policies that were never implemented as if they were, about histories that never occurred as if they were fact. Counter-reality is the terrain of conspiracy theories, of historical revisionism, of every claim that substitutes imagination for evidence.
Example: "He argued passionately about the consequences of a policy that had never been implemented, citing 'facts' that existed only in his mind. Counter-reality had replaced reality: he was debating something that never happened, using evidence that never existed. There was no way to argue with him because he wasn't arguing about the world—he was arguing about a world he'd invented."
by Abzugal March 7, 2026
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Counter-fallacies

The strategic deployment of fallacy accusations as a rhetorical weapon—using the language of logic not to identify errors but to dismiss opponents. Counter-fallacies are what happen when fallacy-spotting itself becomes fallacious. You cry "ad hominem" whenever someone criticizes you; you scream "straw man" whenever someone summarizes your position; you declare "slippery slope" whenever someone predicts consequences. The counter-fallacy turns logic into a cudgel, fallacy-naming into a silencing tactic. It's meta-fallacy: using the concept of fallacy to commit fallacies.
Counter-fallacies Example: "Every response she made was met with a fallacy label. 'Ad hominem!' (she'd mentioned his bias). 'Straw man!' (she'd summarized his argument). 'Slippery slope!' (she'd predicted a consequence). Counter-fallacy: using fallacy accusations to avoid engagement. He wasn't doing logic; he was doing rhetoric, using logic's language to silence discussion."
by Abzugal March 7, 2026
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