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Working On It

Also Known As: Eternal process Perpetual progress Working-on-it defense
Discourse Mechanics 💨 Hollow Rhetoric ID: working_on_it

Definition

A rhetorical pattern where the claim of ongoing work — 'we're working on it', 'we're in the process of', 'we're looking into it' — becomes a permanent state. The process itself is the product. There's always work happening, always progress being made, but the finish line never arrives. The eternal present tense of work substitutes for the past tense of completion.

Examples

"The team is actively working on resolving this issue." — said for the sixth consecutive quarter.

"We are in the process of developing a comprehensive strategy to address this challenge."

"This is a priority for us and we are making steady progress." — with no metrics provided.

Formal Logic Pattern
FOL Pattern
The First-Order Logic formula representing this reasoning pattern's logical structure.
FOL (First-Order Logic) uses quantifiers (∀ = for all, ∃ = there exists), connectives (∧ = and, ∨ = or, ⇒ = implies, ¬ = not), and predicates to capture the essential form of a reasoning pattern. For example, the Ad Hominem fallacy: Person(x) ∧ HasFlaw(x) ⇒ Invalid(Claim(x)). These patterns allow automated verification of logical validity.

∃x∃p(Claim(x) ∧ Process(p) ∧ Ongoing(p) ∧ InvokedBy(p,x) ∧ ¬∃r(Result(r) ∧ Produced(p,r)))
Formal Verification:
Formal Verification
Checks whether a reasoning pattern is logically valid or invalid using an automated theorem prover.
Formal verification uses an SMT (Satisfiability Modulo Theories) solver — specifically Z3 — to mathematically check whether an argument's logical structure is valid. Each reasoning pattern is translated into First-Order Logic and tested: Can the premises be true while the conclusion is false? If yes, it's formally invalid. If no, it's formally valid. Many real-world patterns (analogies, heuristics) cannot be fully captured in formal logic — these are marked as not formally decidable, which doesn't mean they're wrong.
Not formally decidable

Verification Steps
Verification Steps
Binary yes/no questions that an AI must answer to detect a reasoning pattern in a text.
Each of the 452 aspects has verification steps — simple yes/no questions designed to systematically detect whether a pattern appears in a text. For ad hominem: "Does the argument attack a person rather than their claim?" For false dichotomy: "Are only two options presented when more exist?" This ensures consistent, reproducible analysis.

Binary (yes/no) questions an LLM must answer to identify this aspect:

  1. 1

    Does the statement claim that something is being worked on or is in progress?

    Type: binary
  2. 2

    Is the 'working on it' accompanied by timelines, milestones, or measurable deliverables?

    Type: binary
  3. 3

    Has the same claim been made before without producing results?

    Type: binary
  4. 4

    Does the process claim deflect pressure for actual outcomes?

    Type: binary
Deep Dive
The expandable detail section on each aspect page with examples, psychology, and counter-strategies.
The Deep Dive section provides in-depth information about each aspect: a real-world example showing the pattern in action, an explanation of why it works psychologically, practical advice on how to counter it, alternative names, and links to related aspects.

Hierarchical Context