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Logic Forging

The deliberate fabrication of a false chain of deductive reasoning, presenting a series of statements that appear to follow formal logical rules but which contain a secretly invented or twisted rule. This creates a simulacrum of a logical proof that "proves" something false. It's like writing a mathematical proof where you quietly redefine what the equals sign means halfway through.
Example: "He forged a logic to prove his conspiracy: 'Premise 1: Powerful people keep secrets. Premise 2: I have a secret. Conclusion: I am powerful. If I am powerful and they are powerful, we are part of the same secret network. QED.' He'd forged a link between trivial and grand secrets, creating a fake logical bridge to inflate his own importance." Logic Forging
by AbzuInExile January 31, 2026
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Logic Crafting

The careful, architectural design of a reasoning system using valid logical rules, but with carefully chosen, biased, or false premises that the audience is likely to accept. The logic itself is sound, but the entire structure is engineered to lead to a pre-determined outcome because the starting points were rigged. It's giving someone a perfectly accurate map that leads directly to your own boutique because you secretly defined "destination" as "my store."
Example: "The lawyer crafted his logic flawlessly: 'If the defendant was at home, he couldn't be at the crime scene. His smart home data shows his lights were on at home. Therefore, he was at home.' The logic was valid, but he'd crafted it to omit the fact the defendant's lights were on a timer—a premise he carefully avoided examining." Logic Crafting
by AbzuInExile January 31, 2026
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Theory of Constructed Logic

The provocative idea that even the rules of logic (like non-contradiction: a thing cannot be both A and not-A) are not timeless, Platonic truths discovered by the brain, but are cognitive tools our minds and cultures have constructed because they are useful for survival and communication. Other systems of reasoning (dialetheism, fuzzy logic) can be constructed, showing that our "common sense" logic is one possible system among many.
*Example: "In our logic, 'the statement is true or false' seems obvious. In quantum computing, a qubit can be in a superposition—both 1 and 0 at once. The Theory of Constructed Logic suggests our everyday logic isn't the law of the universe, but a very useful mental model we built to navigate a middle-sized, slow-moving world. For the subatomic realm, we had to construct a weirder logic."*
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
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