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Absolutist Fallacy

Absolutist Fallacy, also Objectivist Fallacy - The belief that one's own perspective is not just valid but objectively true, universal, and beyond question, while all other perspectives are biased, subjective, or simply wrong. The absolutist fallacy assumes that reality has a single correct interpretation and that you happen to possess it. It's the fallacy behind "I'm not political, I just believe in common sense" (where common sense means your opinions), "I'm not ideological, I'm just rational" (where rational means agreeing with you), and "I see things as they are, everyone else sees them through a lens" (where your lens is invisible to you). The absolutist fallacy makes genuine dialogue impossible because you're not participating in a conversation—you're delivering truth to the misinformed.
Example: "He committed the absolutist fallacy daily, presenting his conservative views as 'objective reality' and liberal views as 'ideological delusion.' When she pointed out that objectivity was complicated, he said she was being 'relativist' and that relativism was the death of truth. He didn't see that his 'truth' was just his perspective, elevated to universal status by his own certainty."
by Dumu The Void February 15, 2026
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Atomization Fallacy

The mistaken belief that complex phenomena can be fully understood by breaking them into isolated components and studying each separately. The atomization fallacy ignores emergence—the way wholes have properties that parts don't, the way interactions create new realities. It's the logic of understanding a car by studying its parts separately (ignoring that a pile of parts isn't a car), of understanding society by studying individuals (ignoring that society is more than the sum). The atomization fallacy is beloved of reductionists, who think they're being rigorous when they're just being incomplete. The cure is recognizing that analysis must be followed by synthesis—understanding parts in relation, not in isolation.
Atomization Fallacy Example: "He studied happiness by analyzing brain chemistry, genetics, individual psychology—atomizing the phenomenon into its components. He knew everything about the parts and nothing about how they combined into the experience of joy. The atomization fallacy had given him data without meaning, information without understanding."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 17, 2026
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Absolutist Fallacy

The belief that one possesses absolute, objective truth and that everyone who disagrees is simply wrong—not differently situated, not operating from different premises, not seeing a different aspect of reality, but simply, absolutely wrong. The Absolutist Fallacy is objectivity bias taken to its logical extreme: not just believing you're right, but believing that rightness is a property you possess and others lack. It's the fallacy of the true believer, the ideologue, the person who has never encountered a perspective that challenged their own and survived the encounter intact. Absolutist Fallacy makes dialogue impossible because there's nothing to discuss—you have the truth; they have error. The only question is how to correct them.
Example: "He didn't argue; he declared. Every conversation was a lecture, every disagreement a sign of the other person's confusion. Absolutist Fallacy meant he possessed truth; everyone else was just wrong. When she tried to offer a different perspective, he didn't engage—he corrected. There was nothing to discuss because discussion implies uncertainty, and he had none."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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Honeymoon Fallacy

The mistaken belief that the affective intensity of early romantic attachment is a permanent state rather than a temporary phase requiring later replacement by practiced intimacy and relational maintenance.
Matthew: Remember that movie To the Wonder (2012), Terrence Malick's poetic examination of relationships, where Ben Affleck, an American, falls in love with Olga Kurylenko, a French, in Paris and then she and her daughter move with him to the U.S.

Matthew (cont.): And then when their union falters, he considers becoming involved with Rachel McAdams, an old girlfriend, allthewhile, Javier Bardem, a priest, contemplates the relationship between God/Jesus and love?

Ari: Yeah.... That Honeymoon Fallacy's a real bitch
by Malokingi23 February 23, 2026
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The fallacy of thinking that pointing out a claim is unfalsifiable is automatically a refutation. While unfalsifiability can be a problem for scientific claims, it's not a problem for all claims. Many important domains involve unfalsifiable claims—and that's fine. The fallacy lies in treating "unfalsifiable" as synonymous with "meaningless" or "false," ignoring that different domains have different standards. It's the mirror image of the Appeal to Falsifiability—using unfalsifiability as a dismissal without considering whether falsifiability is even relevant.
"Your ethical principle is unfalsifiable, so it's meaningless!" That's Unfalsifiability Fallacy Fallacy—applying a scientific criterion to ethics. Ethics isn't supposed to be falsifiable; it's about values, not predictions. Unfalsifiable doesn't mean meaningless—it means different rules apply."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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The fallacy of assuming that pointing out an inconsistency in someone's position is automatically a devastating refutation, when in fact inconsistency may be superficial, irrelevant, or even appropriate in complex domains. Human beings are inconsistent; complex realities contain contradictions; different contexts require different principles. The fallacy lies in treating inconsistency as automatically fatal, ignoring that consistency is just one virtue among many—and sometimes overrated.
"You believe in both individual freedom and social responsibility—that's inconsistent! Gotcha!" That's Inconsistency Fallacy Fallacy. Life is inconsistent. Complex positions contain tensions. Pointing out inconsistency isn't the same as showing error—sometimes it just shows complexity."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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Scientistic Fallacy

Insisting that something meant to be literal, experiential, or interpretive is actually "scientific" as an explanation or justification for something that otherwise wouldn't fit a scientific framework. Often appears in debates about spirituality, consciousness, or meaning: "Meditation is just brain chemistry" (as if that explains the experience away). "Love is just hormones" (as if the reduction captures the reality). The fallacy lies in treating scientific descriptions as complete explanations, ignoring that science describes mechanisms, not meanings. The chemical is real; the experience is also real, and the chemical doesn't exhaust it.
Scientistic Fallacy "You think your mystical experience is real? It's just temporal lobe activity." That's Scientistic Fallacy—using a scientific description to dismiss the experience itself. But temporal lobe activity isn't an alternative to the experience—it's a description of one aspect of it. The experience remains, whether or not you can correlate it with brain activity. Science explains mechanisms; it doesn't explain away meanings."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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