A bias that treats Western standards of proof—deductive certainty for mathematics, statistical significance for science, eyewitness testimony for law—as neutral, universal, and the only legitimate ways to establish truth. The Bias of Neutral and Impartial Proof ignores that standards of proof vary across cultures and historical periods, that what counts as "proof" is negotiated, not discovered, and that Western proof standards have been used to dismiss non-Western knowledge systems. It presents "proof" as a pure concept, erasing its social construction. Those with this bias don't see their proof standards as one tradition; they see them as proof itself. Everyone else has anecdotes, superstition, or belief.
"Where's your proof?" they demanded, meaning "Where's your double-blind RCT?" Bias of Neutral and Impartial Proof: treating one culture's proof standards as universal. The speaker never considered that other forms of validation exist—centuries of observation, intergenerational knowledge, lived experience. Their proof was just proof; everything else was anecdote."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
Get the Bias of Neutral and Impartial Proof mug.A bias that treats Western evidentiary hierarchies—privileging quantitative over qualitative, experimental over observational, published over experiential—as neutral, universal, and the only legitimate ways to know. The Bias of Neutral and Impartial Evidence ignores that what counts as evidence is shaped by power, that different domains require different kinds of evidence, and that Western evidence standards have been used to exclude marginalized knowers. It presents "evidence" as a pure category, erasing its politics. Those with this bias don't see their evidentiary standards as one tradition; they see them as evidence itself. Everyone else has anecdotes, stories, or bias.
"That's just anecdotal, not real evidence." Bias of Neutral and Impartial Evidence: treating quantitative data as the only evidence, dismissing experience, testimony, and qualitative research. The speaker never considered that for some questions, anecdotes are the only evidence available. Their evidence was just evidence; everything else was nothing."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
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A cognitive and metacognitive bias where individuals or institutions claim to occupy a position of pure impartiality—above the fray, free from bias, beyond politics—while systematically favoring certain perspectives, interests, or outcomes. The Bias of Impartiality is the belief that one can be truly impartial, that such a position is possible, and that one occupies it. It ignores that all knowledge, all judgment, all observation comes from somewhere—from a body, a history, a culture, a set of interests. The claim to impartiality is itself a move in a power game: it positions the speaker as neutral and everyone else as biased, without ever examining the speaker's own position. Judges claim impartiality while embodying the law's history of exclusion. Journalists claim impartiality while framing stories within dominant narratives. Scientists claim impartiality while working within paradigms shaped by funding, culture, and power. The Bias of Impartiality is not that we fail to be impartial; it's that we think we can be.
"I'm just being impartial, looking at the facts objectively." The judge said this while wearing robes that symbolize centuries of legal tradition, in a courtroom built on land stolen from indigenous peoples, applying laws written by property owners to protect property. Bias of Impartiality: the belief that one can stand nowhere while standing firmly on somewhere. Impartiality is not a position; it's a claim of power."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
Get the Bias of Impartiality mug.A pervasive bias where human creations—institutions, systems, artifacts, knowledge—are treated as if they were impartial, objective, and free from the human interests that produced them. The Bias of Impartial Things projects neutrality onto things that are anything but neutral: science shaped by funding and paradigm, technology embedded with values and assumptions, culture carrying centuries of history, economics built on particular theories of human nature, law encoding power relations, secularism reflecting specific historical struggles. The bias treats these human products as if they fell from the sky, as if they weren't made by particular people in particular times with particular interests. It's the ultimate fetishism: forgetting that humans made the human world, and treating that world as natural, neutral, inevitable. The smartphone isn't impartial; it's built with minerals mined by children, designed by engineers in Silicon Valley, powered by algorithms trained on biased data. But the Bias of Impartial Things sees only the device, not the world that made it.
"The algorithm is impartial—it just processes data." Bias of Impartial Things: treating a human creation as if it weren't human. The algorithm was trained on historical data full of bias, designed by engineers with assumptions, deployed by companies with interests. But the bias sees only code, not context. The thing seems impartial; the world that made it disappears. Impartial things are never impartial; they're just things whose making we've forgotten."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
Get the Bias of Impartial Things mug.A bias where individuals or groups engage in "exposing" others—revealing alleged wrongdoing, hypocrisy, or scandal—while being selectively blind to similar or worse behavior in their own side. The Bias of Exposing is what makes partisans obsessive about the other side's scandals and oblivious to their own. It's the bias of the whistleblower who only blows the whistle on enemies, of the accountability activist who only holds the other side accountable. The Bias of Exposing is a form of motivated perception: we see clearly what serves our interests and are blind to what threatens them. It's the cognitive engine of hypocrisy, the fuel of selective outrage.
Example: "He spent hours exposing corruption in the opposing party but never mentioned scandals in his own. The Bias of Exposing wasn't deliberate hypocrisy; it was genuine blindness. He saw what he was motivated to see and was blind to the rest. His outrage was sincere—and selective."
by Abzugal March 9, 2026
Get the Bias of Exposing mug.Shantahlia: Justin, stop messaging my family. You are harassing them.
Justin: Excuse me you are being a bias bitch! I'm the real victim! I'm done with you.
Justin: Excuse me you are being a bias bitch! I'm the real victim! I'm done with you.
by jkoss2654 May 1, 2025
Get the bias bitch mug.And by 'veils in my own rhetoric' I mean 'Weaponizing schizophrenia by talking about the things I do while they aren't around in a way that could be easily misconstrued as delusions of reference' or 'Using their children as a cudgel' which is how you know he is lying to detract from the fact they buried the 'Weaponized schizophrenia' I was talking about and are now trying to shield themselves from liability for child murders that may have occurred.
Hym "Breaking! Biased Lawyer Veils The Justification Of His Corrupt Actions In My Own Rhetoric To Detract From The Fact That YouTube Influencers Are DELIBERATELY Trying To Make It Look Like Someone Has A Mental Illness They Don't Actually Have To Make A Point About Women Or Slurs Or Something! Or maybe they AREN'T trying to make a point! Maybe they are just doing it so they can tell themselves that what they are doing to me isn't that bad and that it isn't their fault that a bunch of children got murdered but, rather, they can scapegoat me for doing nothing more than describe my own situation (in great detail) and draw attention to it in the only way I could thing to do so."
by Hym Iam May 16, 2025
Get the Biased Lawyer Veils The Justification Of His Corrupt Actions In My Own Rhetoric To Detract From The Fact mug.