The specific analysis of group behavior within communities that are defined by their commitment to particular logical frameworks. It explores the social dynamics of debate clubs (why is there always one person who just wants to argue about the rules of debate?), the hierarchy of philosophy departments (logical positivists look down on everyone), and the peculiar rituals of online rationalist communities (where "steelmanning" someone's argument can become a competitive sport). Metalogical sociology reveals that even among people dedicated to pure reason, social status is determined by who can be the most reasonably annoying.
Example: "At the rationalist meetup, a perfect example of metalogical sociology occurred. Someone made a casual statement about preferring tea to coffee, and immediately three people began 'steelmanning' the pro-coffee position, two people pointed out the informal fallacy in the original statement, and one person started a Bayesian analysis of beverage preferences. No one actually drank any tea or coffee, as that would have been an empirical claim requiring further study."
by Abzugal February 14, 2026
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