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Kampf Bias

A version of the Boghossian-Lindsay-Pluckrose Bias emerging from the "Feminist Mein Kampf" incident, where the existence of a successful word-substitution hoax is used to dismiss entire fields, ideologies, or publications as intellectually bankrupt. Kampf Bias assumes that because a journal or blog accepted a text with politically charged word substitutions, the entire enterprise it represents is fraudulent. A Zionist publication accepting a passage originally from Mein Kampf (with names changed) proves that Zionism is Nazism. A feminist journal accepting a passage with gender terms swapped proves that feminism is intellectually empty. A conservative magazine accepting a passage with political terms substituted proves that conservatism is just a rebranding of its opposite. Kampf Bias ignores that such hoaxes reveal weaknesses in editorial processes, not the worthlessness of entire fields; that acceptance reflects the judgment of a few editors, not the validity of an entire tradition; and that the hoax itself is a performance, not a proof. But for those who want to dismiss without engaging, Kampf Bias provides perfect cover: one hoax, one acceptance, and an entire domain of inquiry can be written off forever.
Example: "He'd never read a word of feminist theory, but he'd heard about the Mein Kampf hoax. Kampf Bias meant that was enough: if a feminist journal could be fooled by a word-substitution trick, feminism itself was fraudulent. He never considered that the hoax revealed editorial failure, not intellectual bankruptcy; that one acceptance didn't invalidate decades of scholarship; that his dismissal was itself a form of bias. Kampf Bias had given him permission to stop thinking, and he took it gladly."
by Abzugal March 8, 2026
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Sokal Bias

A form of cognitive bias and meta-bias where you dismiss all criticism, questioning, and opposing positions by labeling them under a single, easily attackable category—typically "postmodernism" or "relativism"—inspired by the Sokal Affair. Sokal Bias is the intellectual equivalent of putting everything you disagree with in a box labeled "nonsense" and refusing to open it. It allows you to maintain your worldview without ever engaging with alternatives, to dismiss complex arguments with a single word, to strawman entire traditions of thought. Sokal Bias is particularly common in online debates, where "postmodernism" has become a catch-all insult for anything the speaker doesn't understand or doesn't like.
Example: "Every time she raised a critique, he called it 'postmodern nonsense.' Sokal Bias had reduced all complexity to a single label, all challenge to a single dismissal. She could have been making the most rigorous argument in the world; it wouldn't matter. The label did all the work."
by Abzugal March 8, 2026
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Hegemony Bias

A bias and meta-bias that combines objectivity bias (thinking one's views are objective), neutrality bias (thinking one's position is neutral), impartiality bias (thinking one's judgments are impartial), and normality bias (thinking one's way is normal) into a unified framework of assumed superiority. Hegemony Bias is the cognitive architecture of cultural dominance: the assumption that one's own perspective is not just a perspective but the perspective—objective, neutral, impartial, normal. Everyone else is biased, partial, interested, deviant. Hegemony Bias makes its holders incapable of seeing themselves as others see them, incapable of recognizing their own position as a position. It's the bias of empire, of privilege, of power that has become invisible to itself.
Example: "He thought his views were objective, his position neutral, his judgments impartial, his way normal. Hegemony Bias had made his perspective invisible to him—not a perspective at all, just reality. Everyone else was biased; he was just correct. The bias was invisible to him, which is how it worked."
by Dumu The Void March 10, 2026
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Impartiality Bias

The bias of believing that one's own judgments are impartial, free from bias, unaffected by interest or identity—while recognizing that others are biased. Impartiality Bias is the conviction that you are the exception, that you see things as they really are, that your judgments are pure. It's the bias of judges who think they're above politics, of journalists who think they're just reporting facts, of scientists who think they're just following evidence. Impartiality Bias makes its holders incapable of examining their own partiality, because they don't believe they have any. It's the bias that denies it's a bias, which is what makes it so powerful.
Example: "He presented his analysis as impartial, unbiased, just the facts. Impartiality Bias meant he never had to examine his assumptions, his interests, his position. His impartiality was invisible to him—not a claim to examine, just a fact about himself. Everyone else was biased; he was just impartial."
by Dumu The Void March 10, 2026
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Normalcy Bias

The bias of assuming that one's own way of being, thinking, and living is normal—and that anything different is deviant, strange, or wrong. Normalcy Bias is the cognitive foundation of prejudice, of ethnocentrism, of every system that treats difference as deficit. It's the assumption that how I live is not just how I live but how people should live, and that those who live differently are not just different but wrong. Normalcy Bias is invisible to those who hold it because their way of being feels not like a choice but like reality. They don't see their own culture; they see the world. Everyone else has a culture; they have normality.
Example: "He couldn't understand why other cultures did things differently. To him, his way wasn't a way; it was just 'normal.' Normalcy Bias meant he never had to examine his own assumptions—they weren't assumptions, they were just reality. Other people were strange; he was just normal."
by Dumu The Void March 10, 2026
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Objectivity Bias

The cognitive bias where a person believes their own views constitute objective reality, unbiased facts, and neutral truth—while dismissing anyone who disagrees as biased, delusional, or irrational. Objectivity Bias is the conviction that your perspective is not a perspective but reality itself. It's the bias that makes dialogue impossible because disagreement becomes not difference but error, not alternative but falsehood.
Example: "He didn't think his views were views; they were just reality. Objectivity Bias meant everyone else was biased; he was just correct. The irony was invisible to him, which is how it worked."
by Dumu The Void March 10, 2026
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Paradigm Bias

The inability to see outside the conceptual box you’re already in. It’s the belief that your current model of understanding—your paradigm—is the only possible or correct way to view the world. Any information that doesn't fit is either ignored, forced to fit, or ridiculed. It's not just about having a point of view; it's about being so trapped within it that you can't even conceive of a valid alternative.
Example: "For decades, Paradigm Bias made musicians think the only way to record an album was in a million-dollar studio, until someone proved you could do it on a laptop."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
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