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The theory that reality itself—what we take to be real, true, given—is shaped by political and economic forces. The theory argues that reality is not simply discovered but constructed, that what counts as real depends on who has the power to define reality. This isn't idealism; it's realism about power. The Theory of the Political and Economic Nature of Reality explains why certain truths are recognized and others suppressed, why some experiences are validated and others dismissed, why reality is never neutral. Those who control resources also control what counts as real—and what counts as real shapes what can be done.
Example: "He used to think reality was just... reality. Then he encountered the Theory of the Political and Economic Nature of Reality: who decides what's real? Who benefits from that definition? Who is erased by it? Reality wasn't given; it was made—by power, for power. He started seeing the construction everywhere, and couldn't unsee it."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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Theory of Dual Reality

The theory that there are two simultaneous realities: a visible, public, surface reality, and an invisible, hidden, deeper reality—like software and hardware, or like the non-secret world and the secret world that actually runs things. Dual Reality argues that what we see, what we're told, what's official is only part of the story; underneath runs another reality, hidden from most, known to few, that actually determines how things work. This isn't conspiracy theory; it's structural analysis. Every system has its visible face and its hidden machinery; every institution has its public story and its private truth. The Theory of Dual Reality explains why things are often not what they seem, why those in power seem to know things others don't, why reality feels layered. The visible reality is for most people; the invisible reality is for those who need to know.
Theory of Dual Reality Example: "He'd always sensed there was more going on than he could see—decisions made elsewhere, information withheld, a hidden hand. The Theory of Dual Reality gave him language for it: visible reality was what he was shown; invisible reality was what actually ran things. He started paying attention to the gaps, the silences, the things that didn't fit. The hidden reality never fully revealed itself, but he learned to read its traces."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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Reality Perspectivism

The application of perspectivism to reality itself—the view that reality is not a single, fixed, perspective-independent thing but a multiplicity, seen differently from different perspectives. Reality Perspectivism doesn't deny that there is a real world; it denies that there is one privileged description of that world. Reality is like a landscape seen from many angles—each view is real, each reveals something, none is the whole. Reality Perspectivism is the philosophy of ontological pluralism, of the recognition that reality is richer than any single account can capture. It's the view that the world is not a puzzle to be solved but a mystery to be explored from every angle.
Example: "He used to think there was one reality, one true description. Reality Perspectivism showed him otherwise: reality was like a mountain—seen differently from every side, each view real, none exhaustive. His description was true from where he stood; so were others. He stopped looking for the one true map and started exploring the territory."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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Reality Contextualism

The application of contextualism to reality itself—the view that what counts as real varies with context, that reality is not a single fixed thing but a multiplicity that reveals different aspects in different contexts. Reality Contextualism doesn't deny that there is a real world; it denies that there is one privileged description of that world that holds in all contexts. What's real in a physics lab may not be real in a courtroom; what's real in a dream may not be real in waking life; what's real for one culture may not be real for another. Reality is context-sensitive, and the task is not to find the one true context but to navigate between them.
Example: "He used to think reality was reality—same everywhere, always. Reality Contextualism showed him otherwise: what was real in a game wasn't real outside it; what was real in a relationship wasn't real in a contract; what was real in one culture wasn't real in another. Reality wasn't one thing; it was many, each real in its context. He stopped looking for the one true reality and started learning to navigate different ones."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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The theory that reality itself is shaped by power—that what counts as real, what counts as true, what counts as possible is determined by those who hold power. The Theory of the Reality of Power argues that power doesn't just control resources or institutions; it controls the very terms of reality. Those who have power define what can be said, what can be thought, what can be known. They determine which facts matter, which truths are recognized, which realities are real. This is not conspiracy; it's structure. Power shapes reality not by lying but by defining the terms on which truth is told. The Theory of the Reality of Power is the recognition that reality has a politics.
Example: "He used to think reality was just reality—given, fixed, neutral. The Theory of the Reality of Power showed him otherwise: those with power decided what counted as real. Their version was taught in schools, repeated in media, enforced by law. Other realities existed, but they were marginalized, suppressed, erased. Reality wasn't neutral; it was political. He started asking who got to define what's real—and who paid the price."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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The theory that reality itself is shaped by power—that what counts as real, what counts as true, what counts as possible is determined by those who hold power. The Theory of the Power of Reality argues that power doesn't just control resources or institutions; it controls the very terms of existence. The powerful define what can be said, what can be thought, what can be known. They shape reality not by lying but by defining the frameworks within which truth is told. This theory is the foundation of critical realism, of the recognition that reality has a politics, that truth is never neutral.
Theory of the Power of Reality Example: "He used to think reality was just reality—given, fixed, neutral. The Theory of the Power of Reality showed him otherwise: those with power decided what was real. Their version was taught, repeated, enforced. Other realities existed, but they were suppressed. He started asking who got to define reality—and who paid the price."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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