The theory that biases exist on a spectrum, not as a binary category of "biased" vs. "unbiased." The Bias Spectrum recognizes that all thinking is shaped by perspective, interest, and context—there is no view from nowhere, no pure objectivity. What matters is not whether bias exists but where it falls on multiple axes: how strong it is, how aware the thinker is of it, how it functions, what effects it has. The spectrum allows for distinguishing between different kinds and degrees of bias, for evaluating biases rather than simply naming them. A bias that's acknowledged and compensated for is different from one that's invisible and uncontrolled; a bias that serves understanding is different from one that distorts it. The Theory of the Bias Spectrum calls for mapping biases rather than just accusing.
Example: "He accused her of bias, as if that ended the discussion. The Theory of the Bias Spectrum showed why that was crude: everyone has bias. The question was where her bias fell on the spectrum—how strong, how aware, how distorting. The accusation wasn't an argument; it was just a label. The spectrum demanded actual evaluation."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
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