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Meta-Truth

A truth that operates on a level above regular factual claims, dealing with the nature, construction, and limits of truth itself. It's not about whether a statement is true (e.g., "the sky is blue"), but about the framework that makes such an assessment possible (e.g., "truth is a relationship between statements and a socially-agreed-upon reality"). Meta-truths are the rules of the truth-game, often emerging in philosophy, postmodern critique, or when someone says, "Well, technically, truth is subjective." They're the truths you use to deconstruct other truths, often leaving you intellectually satisfied but unable to win a simple argument.
Example: "In the debate, he pulled a meta-truth: 'Your facts are all correct, but they're trapped within a capitalist paradigm that defines value through growth, which is itself a constructed truth.' He was factually obliterated, but claimed a higher, meta-truth victory that pissed everyone off."
by Dumu The Void January 30, 2026
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Meta-Debate

The debate about how to properly conduct a debate, which inevitably becomes a more heated and pedantic debate than the original one. It's when the argument shifts from the topic (e.g., "Is pizza a sandwich?") to the rules of engagement ("You're using an ad hominem!", "No, that's a tu quoque!"). It's the rhetorical equivalent of two lawyers arguing over courtroom procedure while the jury dies of old age. The goal is no longer to persuade, but to win by declaring the other person's entire mode of discussion invalid.
Example: "We started arguing about rent control, but within minutes we were in a full meta-debate about logical fallacies, burden of proof, and the definition of 'evidence.' Two hours later, we'd solved nothing about housing but were deeply angry about the proper use of the Socratic method."
by Dumu The Void January 30, 2026
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Meta-Argument

An argument whose subject is another argument. It's not about the initial claim, but about the structure, validity, or motives behind the opposing case. "You're only saying that because you're emotional!" "That's a genetic fallacy!" The meta-argument is a tactical retreat from the messy battlefield of facts to the fortified high ground of rhetorical theory, where you can snipe at your opponent's way of arguing instead of their actual points.
Example: "His actual point about the budget was weak, so he launched a meta-argument: 'Your entire premise is rooted in a neoliberal paradigm that you haven't even acknowledged, which makes your following five points epistemically bankrupt.' He didn't address a single number, but he looked very smug."
by Dumu The Void January 30, 2026
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Meta-Reality

The concept that what we perceive as base reality might itself be a construct, simulation, or narrative layer within a larger, truer reality. It’s the philosophical and sometimes psychedelic suspicion that we’re not at the bottom level of existence. This includes simulation theory, the idea that gods are themselves created, or that our universe is a thought in a meta-mind. It’s reality questioning its own reality, leading to a dizzying sense that everything, including the rules of physics, might be local software.
Example: "After his DMT trip, he couldn't stop talking about meta-reality. 'Our world is just the dream of a sleeping giant,' he'd say, 'and its alarm clock is the heat death of the universe. Also, the giant is allergic to peanuts, which is why they're deadly.' It made existential dread feel weirdly specific."
by Dumu The Void January 30, 2026
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