The predisposition to see all discourse and reality itself as primarily a system of logical propositions waiting to be formalized. This bias rejects narrative, metaphor, emotion, and ambiguity as noise, insisting that any meaningful statement can and must be translated into a logical formalism to be taken seriously.
Example: A professor tells a student that their poetic essay on loss is "meaningless" because it cannot be rendered as a series of truth-conditional statements. The hyperlogification bias demands that human experience be forced into the cage of symbolic logic, deeming what doesn't fit as illegitimate.
by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026
Get the Hyperlogification Bias mug.The fallacy that pure reason is the only valid tool to dissect any subject, including profound moral evils. It assumes one can and should debate the "logic" of racism, the "economic efficiency" of slavery, or the "rational merits" of genocide in a detached, clinical way, as if they were abstract puzzles. This bias mistakes the application of rationality for moral intelligence, and often serves to sanitize horror.
Example: A forum hosting a "rational debate" on the Holocaust where participants are instructed to "set aside emotions" and argue only from "statistical and strategic premises" about Nazi efficiency. The hyperrationalism bias creates a morally monstrous space where the form of rational discourse is used to eviscerate its ethical content.
by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026
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The pragmatic, Kant-informed position that while our reality is indeed filtered through innate and learned biases, this is realism for us. We cannot escape our confirmatory frameworks, so the "real" world is the one we collaboratively construct and confirm through shared biases (cultural, scientific, linguistic). Truth is a high-stability confirmation bias agreed upon by a community.
Example: The scientific method is the ultimate expression of confirmation bias realism. It doesn't claim to find bias-free truth, but a stable, inter-subjective truth by making our biases (hypotheses) explicit and rigorously testing them against a shared reality, creating a consensus confirmation that we accept as "real."
by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026
Get the Confirmation Bias Realism mug.A philosophical dead-end stemming from a misreading of Kant, which asserts that all human perception and cognition is nothing but confirmation bias. Since we can never know the "thing-in-itself" (noumenon) and only interpret phenomena through our mental categories, this view claims every observation is simply confirming the pre-existing structures of our mind. It’s a radical skepticism that makes genuine learning or surprise impossible, reducing all experience to a tautological loop.
Example: After a surprising scientific discovery that overturns a theory, someone dismisses it by saying, "The new data only 'confirms' the scientists' hidden bias toward novelty. They were biased to find a change, just as the old guard was biased to find stability. It's all just confirmation bias of everything." This nihilistic take uses epistemology to void empirical evidence entirely.
by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026
Get the Confirmation Bias of Everything mug.The prejudice that favors immediate, practical, "what works" solutions over deeper systemic analysis or principles. It dismisses theory, ethics, or long-term vision as "ivory tower" thinking, while uncritically embracing short-term efficiency, even if it reinforces harmful structures. The bias assumes that practicality is neutral, ignoring that "what works" is defined by and for the existing power system.
Example: A city manager addresses homelessness not by examining housing policy or wage laws, but by funding more aggressive police sweeps of encampments. "We need to be pragmatic; people want clean parks now." This pragmatic bias chooses the immediately visible "solution" that pleases constituents, while actively worsening the root crisis.
by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026
Get the Pragmatic Bias mug.The unfair advantage conferred upon arguments that are simply more time-consuming to refute than to state. It's the tactic of burying a claim under a mountain of citations, convoluted data, or obscure references, knowing that the effort required to unpack and debunk it is prohibitive. The argument gains credibility not from merit, but from the defensive labor it imposes.
*Example: An online post "proving" a fringe historical theory with 50 hyperlinks to self-published books, scanned archaic texts in untranslated German, and garbled statistics. Calling it out would require days of research. The homework bias shields the claim because its sheer, tedious bulk makes it functionally uncontested, allowing it to circulate as "researched."*
by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026
Get the Homework Bias mug.The fallacy of believing that a conclusion derived from a formally valid logical structure is necessarily true or meaningful in the real world. This bias venerates the syntactic correctness of an argument while being blind to the factual inaccuracy of its premises or its deliberate abstraction from reality. Perfect logic, perfectly wrong.
Example: "Premise 1: All birds can fly. Premise 2: A penguin is a bird. Conclusion: Therefore, penguins can fly." The logical bias is the insistence that the airtight logic of the syllogism somehow challenges biological reality, or that pointing out the false premise is "cheating" at the logical game. Form is prized over substance.
by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026
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