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Logical Habitus

The preconscious, embodied orientation toward what counts as logical reasoning—the sense, developed through cultural training and education, of which inferences feel natural, which contradictions feel intolerable, which argument forms feel convincing. Logical Habitus explains why people from different educational backgrounds or cultural traditions can look at the same argument and have opposite intuitive responses: one feels it as airtight deduction, the other as obvious fallacy. It's not that one is logical and the other isn't—it's that they've acquired different senses of what logic feels like. Western formal logic is one logical habitus; dialectical logic is another; Buddhist logic with its tolerance of paradox is another. Logical Habitus operates as a felt sense of rightness in reasoning, below the level of explicit rule-following.
Example: "To him, the argument was obviously valid—modus ponens, clear as day. To his friend trained in a different logical tradition, it felt like a trick. Neither was irrational; they just had different Logical Habitus."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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