MCP ExplorerExplorer

Anti Bullshit Mcp Server

@bmorphismon 9 months ago
19 MIT
FreeCommunity
AI Systems
MCP server for analyzing claims, validating sources, and detecting manipulation using multiple epistemological frameworks

Overview

What is Anti Bullshit Mcp Server

The anti-bullshit-mcp-server is a Model Context Protocol server designed for analyzing claims, validating sources, and detecting manipulation using various epistemological frameworks.

Use cases

Use cases include academic research validation, fact-checking in journalism, assessing marketing claims, and enhancing critical thinking in educational settings.

How to use

To use the anti-bullshit-mcp-server, install the necessary dependencies, build the server, and integrate it with your application. You can then utilize its tools to analyze claims, validate sources, and check for manipulation.

Key features

Key features include: 1) analyze_claim for evaluating claims through multiple frameworks; 2) validate_sources for checking the credibility of cited sources; 3) check_manipulation for identifying various manipulation tactics.

Where to use

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Content

Anti-Bullshit MCP Server

A Model Context Protocol server for analyzing claims, validating sources, and detecting manipulation using multiple epistemological frameworks.

Features

The server provides three main tools for detecting and analyzing bullshit:

1. analyze_claim

Analyzes claims using multiple epistemological frameworks:

  • Empirical Framework

    • Focuses on verifiable evidence
    • Evaluates reproducible results
    • Cross-references academic and scientific sources
    • Assesses methodological rigor
  • Responsible Framework

    • Evaluates ethical implications
    • Assesses community impact
    • Considers traditional knowledge
    • Validates source credibility
  • Harmonic Framework

    • Assesses coherence with established knowledge
    • Integrates multiple perspectives
    • Considers contextual appropriateness
    • Evaluates systemic implications
  • Pluralistic Framework

    • Combines all other frameworks
    • Considers multiple ways of knowing
    • Evaluates contextual appropriateness
    • Assesses practical outcomes
    • Checks alignment with community values

2. validate_sources

  • Extracts and analyzes cited sources
  • Validates credibility and authority
  • Cross-references across multiple platforms
  • Evaluates methodological soundness
  • Checks for conflicts of interest

3. check_manipulation

Detects manipulation tactics including:

  • Emotional manipulation
  • Social pressure
  • False authority
  • Artificial scarcity
  • Urgency creation

Installation

Prerequisites

  • Node.js >= 18.0.0
  • npm or yarn

Setup

  1. Install dependencies:
npm install
  1. Build the server:
npm run build
  1. Add to Claude Desktop (MacOS):
{
  "mcpServers": {
    "anti-bullshit": {
      "command": "node",
      "args": [
        "/path/to/anti-bullshit-mcp-server/build/index.js"
      ]
    }
  }
}

Path: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json

Or for VSCode extension:
Path: ~/Library/Application Support/Code/User/globalStorage/saoudrizwan.claude-dev/settings/cline_mcp_settings.json

Usage Examples

// Analyze a claim
const result = await analyze_claim({
  text: "Studies show that 87% of experts agree with this controversial claim",
  framework: "empirical"
});

// Validate sources
const validation = await validate_sources({
  text: "According to Dr. Smith's groundbreaking research...",
  framework: "responsible"
});

// Check for manipulation
const check = await check_manipulation({
  text: "Act now! This exclusive offer expires in the next 10 minutes!"
});

Development

For development with auto-rebuild:

npm run watch

Debug with MCP Inspector:

npm run inspector

Testing Timeline

The server uses 2025-01-01 as the reference date for temporal analysis of claims (particularly relevant for Goodman’s “grue” paradox and similar philosophical puzzles).

License

MIT

Author

Teglon Labs ([email protected])

Contributing

  1. Fork the repository
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b feature/amazing-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some amazing feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin feature/amazing-feature)
  5. Open a Pull Request

Tools

No tools

Comments

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