Skip to main content

Theory of Elastic Cognition

A framework proposing that cognition itself is elastic—that cognitive processes (perception, memory, reasoning) can stretch across contexts, tasks, and challenges without breaking. Elastic Cognition suggests that cognition isn't fixed but adaptive: attention stretches across tasks, memory stretches across time, reasoning stretches across domains. The theory identifies cognition's elastic limits: when does stretching become overload? When does adaptation become breakdown? Understanding cognition requires understanding its stretch. A meta-framework examining how conceptions of cognition stretch across history, discipline, and paradigm. The Elasticity of Cognitive studies how cognition has been defined—from behaviorism to cognitivism to embodied cognition—and how these definitions stretch under pressure from new research, new technologies. It asks: what are the limits of cognition's stretch? When does a new conception break rather than stretch? How does cognitive science recover from its own reductions? It's cognitive science reflecting on its own history and possibilities.
Theory of Elastic Cognition "Her attention stretched across three tasks—then snapped. Elastic Cognition says that's the limit: cognition can stretch, but only so far. The question isn't whether you can multitask; it's how much stretch your cognition can handle before breaking." "Cognition used to mean mental representation; now it means embodied, embedded, extended. Theory of the Elasticity of Cognitive says that's a stretch—a radical one. The question is whether the concept can stretch further—to include AI cognition, animal cognition, plant cognition—without losing coherence."
by Nammugal March 4, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Elastic Cognition mug.
A framework proposing that cognition itself can dissociate—that thinking can split off from feeling, knowing from experiencing, belief from behavior. Cognitive Dissociation occurs when mental processes that should be integrated operate separately: knowing something intellectually but not feeling it; believing one thing and doing another; holding contradictory beliefs without awareness. The theory suggests that some cognitive dissonance is actually dissociation—a split that protects coherence by keeping contradictions apart.
Theory of Cognitive Dissociation "He knew climate change was real—intellectually, completely. But he lived as if it weren't. That's Cognitive Dissociation: knowledge split from action, intellect split from behavior. Not ignorance, not denial—just dissociation. The knowing part and the living part weren't connected. Integration would require change; dissociation allows stasis."
by Dumu The Void March 4, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Cognitive Dissociation mug.
Related Words
A framework examining malandragem in thinking itself—the cognitive strategies of mental cunning, mental shortcuts, and clever reasoning. Cognitive Malandragem theory asks: How do we trick ourselves into believing what we want? When does clever thinking become self-deception? How do we use mental malandragem to navigate cognitive dissonance? The theory explores the mind's own cunning—the ways we bend mental rules to survive psychological pressure.
Theory of Cognitive Malandragem "He knew the evidence, but he also knew he couldn't face it—so his mind found a way around. Cognitive Malandragem: mental cunning as psychological survival. The theory asks: when does clever thinking become self-deception? And who decides the difference?"
by Dumu The Void March 5, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Cognitive Malandragem mug.
The theory that we see everything and understand reality through paradigms—frameworks of assumptions, concepts, values, and practices that shape what we can see and how we interpret it. The Theory of Social and Cognitive Paradigms argues that this applies to everything, including the scientific method itself, which operates within its own paradigms that change over time. There is no paradigm-free perception, no view from nowhere. What we take to be "just the facts" is always facts-as-seen-through-a-particular-paradigm. The theory explains paradigm shifts in science (Kuhn), cultural differences in perception, and the persistence of disagreement even among reasonable people. It's the foundation of humility about knowledge, the recognition that our way of seeing is one among many.
Example: "He used to think science was just accumulating facts. The Theory of Social and Cognitive Paradigms showed him otherwise: facts were always facts-within-a-paradigm. When paradigms shifted, facts shifted too. Science wasn't a straight line; it was a series of revolutions, each with its own way of seeing."
by Abzugal March 9, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Social and Cognitive Paradigms mug.
The use of artificial intelligence as a tool to model, test, and understand the human mind. By building computational models that perform cognitive tasks—recognizing faces, making decisions, learning languages—researchers can create and test theories about how our own cognition might work. If an AI model behaves like a human under certain conditions, it might suggest that the human brain is using a similar computational strategy. It's cognitive science's most powerful laboratory.
Example: "They weren't sure how children learn grammar until they used AI applied to cognitive sciences to build a model that learned the same way, confirming their hypothesis."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
mugGet the AI Applied to Cognitive Sciences mug.

Argumentum Ad Cognitionem

A logical fallacy where one dismisses an argument by claiming the opponent is delusional, cognitively impaired, or using ableist slurs to describe their mental state. The fallacy lies in treating cognitive capacity as a refutation of claims, as if being confused or mistaken in some areas invalidates everything someone says. This fallacy is particularly toxic because it weaponizes genuine cognitive differences and disabilities, using them as cudgels to dismiss dissent. "You're delusional" becomes a way of saying "I don't need to engage with your points" while performing the appearance of having refuted them. It's argument by ableism, not by reason.
Example: "She presented documented evidence of corruption, and his response was simply 'you're delusional.' Argumentum Ad Cognitionem: using accusations of cognitive failure to avoid confronting uncomfortable facts."
by Dumu The Void March 16, 2026
mugGet the Argumentum Ad Cognitionem mug.

CIA-Induced Cognitive Dissonance

The feeling in your heart that in the CIA has never actually done anything wrong, and that anyone who says they have is a conspiracy theorist.
"Mark still doesn't believe that MK Ultra was a real CIA operation, despite the CIA having confirmed the program's existence and having published information about it to the public."
"That's crazy. He must have CIA-Induced Cognitive Dissonance."
mugGet the CIA-Induced Cognitive Dissonance mug.

Share this definition

Sign in to vote

We'll email you a link to sign in instantly.

Or

Check your email

We sent a link to

Open your email