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Rationalization of Evil

The psychological and rhetorical process of constructing socially acceptable, logical-sounding reasons for morally atrocious acts or systems. It does not merely explain evil; it justifies it by embedding it within a framework of necessity, progress, or higher purpose, making the unacceptable seem prudent or even noble.
Example: "The transatlantic slave trade was a tragic but economically necessary phase in developing modern capital markets and introducing Africans to Christianity." This rationalization of evil uses historical consequence and ideology to weave moral catastrophe into a narrative of tragic inevitability or hidden benefit.
by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026
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Rational Bias

The cognitive distortion where one's own reasoning is perceived as perfectly objective, simply because it follows internal logical rules, while ignoring that the starting premises, value judgments, and framing of the problem are themselves subjective, emotional, or culturally loaded. It's the bias of believing you're bias-free because you feel coldly logical.
Example: A CEO making a "rational" decision to offshore jobs after a dispassionate cost-benefit analysis. Their rational bias allows them to ignore the premises they accepted without question: that shareholder value is the supreme metric, and that community destruction is an external "cost" not factored in.
by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026
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