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Truth Sophism

The use of "truth" as a rhetorical weapon—invoking truth to end discussion, dismiss opponents, or claim authority without justification. Truth Sophism treats "truth" as a possession, not a goal: "I have the truth" means "you have nothing to say." The sophist doesn't demonstrate truth; they assert it, using the word's power to silence. It's sophistry about truth: using the concept to avoid the work of finding it.
"I'm just interested in the truth, unlike you." Truth Sophism: using truth as a cudgel, not a compass. The claim to truth became a way to dismiss, not a way to inquire. Truth wasn't sought; it was asserted—and anyone who disagreed was against truth itself."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
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A cognitive and metacognitive bias that treats a particular definition of truth—usually the Western, Enlightenment-derived conception—as if it were neutral, impartial, and universal, while ignoring the historical, cultural, and political factors that produced it. The Neutral and Impartial Truth Bias presents "truth" as a pure, contextless concept, erasing the power relations, colonial histories, and social struggles that shaped what counts as truth in the West. It assumes that Western rationality is just rationality, Western truth is just truth—not one tradition among many. The bias operates at both individual and collective levels, making it nearly invisible to those who hold it. They don't see themselves as having a truth tradition; they see themselves as having truth itself. Everyone else has culture, bias, perspective. The West has reality.
"Western science discovered truth; other cultures had beliefs." That's Neutral and Impartial Truth Bias: treating the West's definition of truth as truth itself, not as one tradition among many. The speaker didn't see their own historical position; they saw only objectivity. Truth became a possession, not a pursuit—and they owned it."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
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Fooled by Truth Theory

A framework revealing how truth itself can mislead—not by being false, but by being partial, by being only one truth among many, by being deployed to silence other truths. Fooled by Truth Theory shows how claiming to have The Truth can blind us to other perspectives, how the pursuit of truth can become a weapon against understanding, and how certainty can be the enemy of wisdom. We are fooled when we think we possess truth rather than pursue it, when we use truth to end inquiry rather than advance it.
Fooled by Truth Theory "I have the truth," he said—and stopped listening. Fooled by Truth: treating truth as possession, not pursuit. His certainty made him deaf. The truth he had was real, but partial; there were other truths he couldn't hear. Truth fooled him into thinking inquiry was over. But inquiry is never over; truth always has more to say."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
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