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Law of Logical Conformations

The principle that logic, like proteins, can take on many different forms—folding and refolding into diverse structures while maintaining its essential nature as valid reasoning. Classical logic, intuitionistic logic, paraconsistent logic, fuzzy logic—these are different conformations of logic, each suited to different domains, each valid in its context. The Law of Logical Conformations recognizes that logic is not one rigid structure but a family of structures, all related, all serving the function of valid inference. Logic doesn't look the same everywhere because it can't; it adapts to what it's reasoning about.
Example: "He insisted that only classical logic was 'real' logic; everything else was deviation. The Law of Logical Conformations suggested otherwise: different logics are different conformations, each valid for its purpose. Quantum logic works for quantum phenomena; fuzzy logic works for vagueness. They're not less logic; they're logic folded differently. He remained unconvinced, which was logical in his conformation."
by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
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