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Theory of Constructed Truth

The extension of constructionism to the concept of truth itself. It posits that truth is not a static correspondence between statement and world, but an ongoing social process of justification within a community. A statement becomes "true" when it is agreed upon by the relevant epistemic community using their accepted rules (e.g., the scientific method, legal procedure, religious doctrine). This explains how something can be "true" in one context (e.g., a legal verdict) and not in another (e.g., a historical investigation).
Example: "He argued from the Theory of Constructed Truth: 'In this company, the truth is whatever the CEO says in the all-hands meeting. Your data is just a competing construction. To win, you don't need better facts; you need to become the community that defines the truth.' It was cynical, devastating, and probably accurate."
by Dumu The Void January 30, 2026
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The philosophical and sociological position that much of what we experience as objective reality is, in fact, built and maintained through social agreement, language, and shared practices. This doesn't deny physical reality (gravity is real), but argues that the meaning and categories we layer onto it—money, borders, gender roles, justice—are human constructions. These constructions feel real because we all participate in them, but they can and do change across time and cultures. Reality, in this view, is a co-created performance.
Example: "The meeting was a masterclass in the Theory of Constructed Reality. The 'crisis' existed only because they'd all agreed on metrics that defined it, the 'solution' was a PowerPoint that reshaped their shared narrative, and by the end, the constructed problem and its constructed solution felt more solid than the table they were sitting at."
by Dumu The Void January 30, 2026
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The neuroscience-backed model, primarily associated with Lisa Feldman Barrett, which argues that emotions are not hardwired, universal programs (like "anger circuits") triggered by the world. Instead, they are real-time, whole-brain constructions. Your brain uses past experiences (concepts) to make meaning of incoming sensory data and internal bodily signals (arousal), creating an instance of "anger," "fear," or "awe" that is tailored to the specific context. Emotions aren't reactions you have; they are guesses your brain makes to keep you alive, and they vary wildly by culture and individual.
Example: "After learning the Theory of Constructed Emotions, she reframed her 'anxiety.' That churning stomach and racing heart before a presentation wasn't 'anxiety' invading her; it was her brain, using the concept of 'anxiety,' constructing a helpful state of high alert. She started calling it 'energized focus.' It didn't make it pleasant, but it made it feel less like a broken reaction."
by Dumu The Void January 30, 2026
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The idea that a "nation" is not a primordial, natural entity, but a modern fiction invented through shared stories, symbols, and administrative coercion. It argues that the flag, anthem, founding myths, and mass education systems are tools used to convince millions of strangers they share a deep, sacred bond and a common destiny, thereby legitimizing the state's power over a defined territory. The nation is an "imagined community" that feels incredibly real because everyone around you agrees to act as if it is.
Example: "Before 1861, 'Italy' was a geographic expression, a patchwork of warring states. Then, through the Theory of Constructed Nation States, they crafted a story of Roman rebirth, standardized a Tuscan dialect as 'Italian' in schools, and invented rituals. Within two generations, a Sicilian peasant and a Venetian merchant both ‘felt’ Italian, proving the nation is a successful group hallucination with an army and a passport office."
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
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Theory of Constructed Money

The principle that money has no intrinsic value; its worth is a 100% collective agreement. A dollar bill is just fancy paper. Its power to command goods, labor, and loyalty comes solely from our shared trust in the system behind it—the government that issues it, the banks that manage it, and the community that accepts it. Money is a social technology, a ledger of trust made physical, and if that trust evaporates, it reverts to its material worth: zero.
Example: "I tried to buy coffee with a $20 bill from a board game. The barista rejected it, demonstrating the Theory of Constructed Money. My Monopoly money and the U.S. tender were equally green pieces of paper. The only difference was the collective faith in the U.S. Treasury's story. His faith was in the Federal Reserve's fiction, not the one from Parker Brothers."
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
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The counterintuitive argument that the modern concept of the unique, autonomous, inward-looking "self" is a historical invention, not a universal human truth. In this view, our sense of having a private, consistent identity with personal desires and rights is shaped by culture, language, and institutions (like psychology and law). You are not just expressing your true self; you are performing a self that your society has taught you how to be.
*Example: "My great-grandfather saw himself as part of a family, village, and church. I see myself as a 'unique individual' with personal dreams. The Theory of Constructed Individual says we're both right—our sense of self was built by different worlds. My 'authentic self' is a performance scripted by 21st-century individualism, just as his was by communal obligation."*
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
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The perspective that laws are not discovered, eternal truths of justice (like gravity), but are human-made tools that reflect and enforce the power structures, values, and social anxieties of the society that creates them. What is "legal" or "a crime" changes dramatically across time and place, proving that the law is a constructed narrative about order, morality, and control, written by the powerful and naturalized through courts and police.
*Example: "In 1850, U.S. law constructed a Black person as three-fifths of a human for political power. In 1920, it constructed women as fully human for voting. Today, it constructs corporations as 'persons' for free speech. The Theory of Constructed Legal Systems shows law isn't divine logic; it's a story a society tells itself about who and what counts, and that story gets rewritten when power shifts."*
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
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