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Hyperlogification Bias

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
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