The position that facts are not simply discovered features of reality but are built through scientific, legal, and social practices. A fact is a claim that has been stabilized—tested, validated, accepted, and made to stick. This doesn't mean facts aren't real—it means their reality is achieved, not given. The Theory of Constructed Facts studies how facts are made: the work required to establish them, the controversies they survive, the infrastructure that supports them, the communities that maintain them. Facts are real, but reality doesn't come pre-fact-ed.
"You think 'climate change is real' is just a fact that was always there? Theory of Constructed Facts says: it took thousands of scientists, decades of research, satellites, models, debates, and reports to construct that fact. It's real because it was built—and the building is ongoing."
by Dumu The Void February 24, 2026
Get the Theory of Constructed Facts mug.Also known as the factual fallacy, hyperrealistic fallacy, "real world" fallacy, factchuck, realitychuck, or "reality" fallacy—offering dogmatic, closed-minded claims about "facts" and "reality" in a way that treats them as self-evident, unquestionable, and beyond interpretation. The fallacy involves treating one's own interpretation of facts as the facts themselves, dismissing other perspectives as out of touch with "reality." It often includes double standards: my facts are real, your facts are ideology. The fallacy is fundamentalist in structure—it elevates a particular view of reality to the status of reality itself, then uses that elevation to dismiss all alternatives.
"I'm just dealing with facts, not your ideology!" they announced, while presenting cherry-picked data with clear bias. That's Facts to Facts Fallacy—using "facts" as a shield against having to examine your own assumptions. Facts are real; treating your interpretation of them as Reality Itself is not."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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