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Law of Spectral Biases

The principle that biases exist on a spectrum between absolute and relative, with infinite gradations and multiple dimensions. Under this law, no perspective is simply biased or unbiased—each occupies a position in spectral space defined by its sources of distortion, its areas of clarity, its cultural situatedness, its epistemic vices and virtues. The law of spectral biases recognizes that bias is not binary but continuous, that we can be more or less biased in different dimensions, and that the goal is not elimination (impossible) but awareness and mitigation. This law is the foundation of epistemic humility, the recognition that your perspective is always partial, always situated, always capable of improvement.
Law of Spectral Biases Example: "She analyzed her own thinking using spectral biases, mapping it across dimensions: cultural assumptions (present but identified), emotional influences (acknowledged), cognitive shortcuts (working on them), institutional pressures (naming them). The spectral coordinates showed where her bias was most distorting and where it was manageable. She didn't become unbiased—no one does—but she became more aware, which is the point."
by Abzugal February 16, 2026
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