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A logical framework that acknowledges spectra but imposes boundaries, thresholds, and categories for practical decision-making. In a limited spectrum system, truth exists on a continuum, but we agree that above a certain threshold we'll call it "true" and below another we'll call it "false." Reason exists on a spectrum, but we establish criteria for what counts as "valid" for purposes of argument. The logical system of limited spectrum is a compromise between the infinite nuance of reality and the human need for categories. It's the logic of "close enough for government work," of "beyond a reasonable doubt," of "statistically significant." It acknowledges that our categories are arbitrary but necessary—that we must draw lines even though the lines are never quite right.
Example: "She applied a logical system of limited spectrum to her dating life. Instead of asking 'is he perfect?' (infinite spectrum, impossible answer), she asked 'does he meet my threshold for kindness, stability, and not leaving socks everywhere?' The thresholds were arbitrary, the spectrum was limited, but she could actually make a decision. She said yes to the guy, no to the socks, and the system worked."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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