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Critical Thinking Bias

The specific cognitive distortion where one mistakes the performance of skepticism for the practice of genuine critical inquiry. Critical Thinking Bias operates when someone believes that merely asking questions, demanding evidence, or pointing out uncertainty constitutes critical thinking—regardless of whether those questions are good faith, whether the evidence demanded is appropriate, or whether the uncertainty is relevant. It's the bias that produces the "just asking questions" pseudo-skeptic, the sea lion who "just wants evidence" for claims they've already decided are false, the debunker who treats their own cultural assumptions as universal standards of reason. Critical Thinking Bias turns the tools of rational inquiry into weapons of dismissal, transforming "critical thinking" from a practice of genuine openness into a performance of intellectual superiority.
Example: "He wasn't critically thinking—he was performing Critical Thinking Bias, 'just asking questions' in bad faith while treating his own assumptions as too obvious to need examination."
by Dumu The Void March 13, 2026
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Critical Afrocentrism Theory

A theoretical synthesis combining Afrocentric perspectives with critical theory's tools for analyzing power, ideology, and oppression. Critical Afrocentrism Theory examines how Eurocentrism functions not just as bias but as power—how Western dominance in knowledge production serves Western dominance in politics and economics, how the marginalization of African perspectives maintains global hierarchies, how the recovery of African knowledge is itself a form of resistance. It uses the tools of critical theory (critique of ideology, analysis of power, attention to marginalization) while centering African experience and agency. Critical Afrocentrism Theory asks not just "what is true?" but "whose truth counts, and why?"—and insists that answers must include African voices.
Example: "Her analysis showed how colonial archives systematically distorted African history—not just accidentally biased, but structured to serve power. Critical Afrocentrism Theory: using critical tools to understand how knowledge serves domination, and how centering Africa challenges it."
by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
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Critical Decolonial Theory

A synthesis of decolonial thought with the tools of critical theory—particularly the Frankfurt School's analysis of power, ideology, and social transformation. Critical Decolonial Theory uses critical theory's rigorous frameworks for analyzing domination while insisting that those frameworks themselves must be decolonized, freed from their own Eurocentric assumptions. It asks how capitalism, racism, and colonialism intertwine; how knowledge production serves domination; how liberation requires both material transformation and epistemic revolution. Critical Decolonial Theory is decolonial thought with the analytical tools of the European critical tradition—but turned against that tradition's own pretensions to universality.
Example: "Her book used Frankfurt School tools to analyze colonial ideology while also showing how those tools themselves carried colonial assumptions. Critical Decolonial Theory: using the master's tools to dismantle the master's house, while recognizing the tools themselves need rebuilding."
by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
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Critical Economy Theory

A theoretical framework that applies critical theory's tools to understanding economic systems—not just how economies function but how they concentrate power, produce inequality, and shape consciousness. Critical economy theory goes beyond mainstream economics' focus on efficiency and growth to examine economies as sites of domination, exploitation, and struggle. It asks who benefits from economic arrangements, how economic ideology serves power, what alternatives are foreclosed by the naturalization of capitalism. Critical economy theory draws on Marxist, feminist, ecological, and decolonial traditions to understand economies as human creations that could be created differently—not natural systems to be optimized but power-laden institutions to be transformed.
Example: "Her work didn't just measure inequality—it analyzed how the very categories of 'economy' and 'value' serve capitalist power. Critical Economy Theory: economics as critique, not just measurement."
by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
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Critical Legal Theory

A theoretical framework that applies critical theory's tools to understanding legal systems—not just how laws function but how they produce and legitimize power, inequality, and oppression. Critical legal theory examines how law, presented as neutral and just, actually serves dominant interests, how legal reasoning masks political choices, how rights discourse can both liberate and constrain. It draws on Critical Legal Studies, feminist jurisprudence, critical race theory, and related traditions to understand law as a site of struggle—not just rules to be applied but power to be contested. Critical legal theory asks not just "what does the law say?" but "whose interests does it serve, and how could it be otherwise?"
Example: "His analysis showed how 'neutral' contract law systematically advantages corporations over workers—Critical Legal Theory, revealing the politics hidden in apparently technical legal doctrine."
by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
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Critical Theory of Economy

A framework emphasizing the theoretical analysis of economic systems through critical theory's lens—focusing on the conceptual foundations, ideological functions, and power relations embedded in economic thought and practice. The critical theory of economy examines not just economic phenomena but how we think about them—how economic concepts shape reality, how economic ideology naturalizes domination, how economic theory itself can be a form of power. It draws on Marx's critique of political economy, Frankfurt School analysis of capitalism, and contemporary critical traditions to understand economies as sites where material life and consciousness meet, where exploitation is both practiced and justified.
Example: "He didn't just critique capitalism—he critiqued the concepts we use to think about it, showing how 'growth,' 'efficiency,' and 'value' themselves carry ideological weight. Critical Theory of Economy: economics at the level of concepts, not just consequences."
by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
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Critical Theory of Economics

A framework that turns critical theory's tools onto the discipline of economics itself—examining how economics as a field produces knowledge, serves power, and shapes reality. The critical theory of economics asks not just about economic phenomena but about economics: who gets to be an economist, what counts as economic knowledge, how economic models shape the reality they claim to describe, how the discipline's pretensions to science mask its service to power. It draws on history of economic thought, sociology of knowledge, and critical theory to understand economics not as a neutral science but as a social practice with political effects—a way of making worlds, not just describing them.
Example: "Her book showed how economic models don't just describe markets—they create them, training people to behave as the models predict. Critical Theory of Economics: turning critique from the economy to economics itself."
by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
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