The principle that ad hoc constructions exist on a spectrum between absolute and relative, with infinite gradations and multiple dimensions. Under this law, no ad hoc is purely absolute or purely relative—each occupies a position in spectral space defined by its generality, its durability, its context-dependence, its transferability. Some ad hocs are nearly absolute (the fix that works in many situations), some nearly relative (the one-off that never repeats), most somewhere in between. The law of the spectral ad hocs recognizes that ad hoc is not a binary category but a continuous field, with every temporary solution located somewhere on the spectrum of permanence.
Law of the Spectral Ad Hocs Example: "She mapped her life's ad hocs using spectral analysis: the career decision that worked perfectly and lasted decades (near absolute), the parking spot trick that worked only in that one garage (near relative), the relationship advice that helped some friends and not others (spectral middle). The coordinates showed where her ad hocs were likely to generalize and where they were just for her. The map didn't predict the future, but it helped her navigate it."
by Dumu The Void February 17, 2026
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Law of the Spectral Ad Hocs • Law of the Spectral Fallacies • Law of the Spectral Medium • Law of the Spectral Third • Spectral Law of the Included Middle • Law of the Absolute and Relative Ad Hocs • Law of the Absolute and Relative Fallacies • Law of the Ad Hoc Possibility • Law of the Ad Hoc Validity • Law of the Contextual Third