The principle that logic is flexible—capable of adapting to different domains, questions, and purposes without losing its rigor. A flexible logic can incorporate new rules, modify old ones, and shift its standards as needed. An inflexible logic is a straightjacket, not a tool. The Law of Logical Flexibility distinguishes between logic as living discipline and logic as dead dogma: real logic flexes; fake logic fractures. Flexibility is not inconsistency; it's the capacity to apply consistent principles across diverse contexts.
Example: "She used different logics for different problems—formal logic for mathematics, informal logic for everyday arguments, legal logic for contracts. The Law of Logical Flexibility meant this was not confusion but competence. Each logic flexed to fit its domain. Her critics called her inconsistent; she called herself adaptive. Flexibility had done its work: matching tool to task."
by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
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