Ideasfalse
Ideasfalse is a neologism used in information science and media studies to describe beliefs or claims that are plausible in form but false in content. The term, a blend of "ideas" and "false," is employed to distinguish deceptive or mistaken propositions that appear credible from outright nonsense. It is used to analyze how certain ideas gain traction despite lacking reliable evidence.
Common characteristics include surface plausibility, misrepresented or cherry-picked evidence, ambiguous statistics, and appeals to authority. Ideasfalse
Contexts and scope: the concept is used in political communication, science communication, and digital literacy to
Detection and response: effective strategies include critical evaluation of sources, seeking independent verification, demanding transparent methodologies,
Notes: ideasfalse is not an established technical term in any official taxonomy; it is a descriptive label