A philosophical critique that attacks the standard definition of pareidolia as a reductive, materialistic, and nihilistic concept. Critics (often from theistic, postmodern, or existentialist traditions) argue that labeling a perception as "pareidolia" is an arbitrary power move. They demonstrate that the logic can be expanded ad absurdum: if seeing Jesus in toast is a delusion, then seeing "France" on a map, "inflation" in an economy, or "justice" in a court ruling is equally a constructed pattern imposed on complexity. The theory concludes that overapplication of the term drains all meaning from human experience, making it a synonym for absolute nihilism and a rhetorical tool to dismiss non-materialist worldviews.
Example: A secular skeptic mocks a believer for seeing a divine sign in a rainbow (pareidolia). The critic, using the Critical Theory of Pareidolia, retorts: "And you see a 'liberal democracy' in a messy pile of laws, politicians, and protests. You see a 'market trend' in random price fluctuations. Your 'rational' concepts are the same cognitive act—finding comforting, useful patterns in chaos. You just socially agreed on which patterns to sanctify as 'real.' Your skepticism is itself a faith in a particular pattern of thought."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 6, 2026
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