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Meacom

a very based male from the server AOR that is incredibly based, most known for his common saying, “let’s get controversial
Meacom: let’s get controversial
Nameless: +ban @meacom
by Bangweet hater January 7, 2022
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metanominalism

The thesis that numbers count themselves. Idea that numbers come from the future.
Metanominalism is the counterpart to Boolean nihilism (the thesis that math cannot count numbers).

Metanominalism proffers that only reason for numbers' exist is that they can count themselves.
by flightfacilities February 18, 2022
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Metacon

Metacon is short for metaphysical context. Alternative to words like aura.
"Have you seen Isaac lately? His metacon is powerful"
by Jay Freeman December 11, 2024
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Metacognitive Sciences

The interdisciplinary study of metacognition—the human capacity to think about and regulate one's own thinking. This field, spanning cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and education, investigates how we monitor our understanding, gauge our confidence, and choose strategies for learning and problem-solving. It’s the science of how the mind knows itself, from the simple feeling of "knowing you know" to complex executive control.
Example: Research on why students often have poor judgment about their own learning (e.g., thinking they've mastered material after passive highlighting) falls under Metacognitive Sciences. The goal is to develop techniques ("metacognitive strategies") to help people become better judges and pilots of their own mental processes.
by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026
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A framework that examines the different overarching models we have for understanding metacognition—our ability to think about our own thinking. Competing paradigms might view metacognition as: a central executive function in a computer-like brain, an emergent property of distributed neural processes, or a socially constructed skill learned through dialogue. Your metacognitive paradigm dictates how you try to improve thinking, whether through brain training, meditation, or social critique.
Metacognitive Paradigm Theory Example: A self-help guru teaching "mindfulness" operates in a Metacognitive Paradigm that sees thought as a stream to be observed non-judgmentally. A cognitive therapist teaching clients to identify "cognitive distortions" operates in a paradigm that sees thought as a set of propositions to be logically analyzed. They're both doing metacognition, but from fundamentally different theoretical starting points.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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Metacognitive Biases

Flaws in our self-monitoring and self-regulation of thinking processes (metacognition). These biases distort our judgment of our own understanding, learning, and problem-solving abilities. Key examples include the Dunning-Kruger effect (poor performers overestimate their ability) and the Illusion of Explanatory Depth (believing you understand something complex until you have to explain it). They are biases in the "dashboard readings" of your own mind.
Metacognitive Biases Example: A student crams for an exam and feels a strong "feeling of knowing." This Metacognitive Bias leads them to stop studying, confident they've mastered the material. During the test, they blank—their metacognitive gauge of knowledge was faulty, mistaking familiarity for understanding.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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Metacognitive Biases of Wiki

Flaws in Wikipedia editors' and readers' self-awareness about their own knowledge and judgment while using the platform. These biases distort how contributors assess their expertise, gauge the reliability of their edits, and monitor their comprehension of policies. Key examples include the Wikipedia Illusion of Explanatory Depth (believing you understand a topic fully after editing its article, when you've only mastered its presentation), and Procedural Overconfidence (thinking that strictly following citation and NPOV rules guarantees you've produced a "true" article, mistaking process-compliance for substantive understanding). These biases turn the wiki-editing experience into a metacognitive trap, where the act of curation is mistaken for mastery.
Metacognitive Biases of Wiki Example: A Wikipedia editor spends weeks polishing the article on "Quantum Entanglement," meticulously sourcing every claim. They develop a strong Metacognitive Bias of Wiki: the "feeling of knowing." They now believe they deeply understand quantum physics, confusing their hard-won skill in encyclopedic summarization with actual expertise in theoretical physics, and may start arguing authoritatively on physics forums, leading to embarrassing corrections.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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