2 2 5
Also known as: Two Plus Two Equals Five · 2+2=5
2 + 2 = 5 is a deliberately false equation used online to call out authoritarian control over truth, ideological groupthink, and the demand to accept obvious falsehoods. The phrase appeared in print as early as 1728 but gained its modern meaning through George Orwell's 1949 novel *Nineteen Eighty-Four*, where citizens are forced to agree that two plus two equals five as proof of the Party's absolute power. In 2020, the expression sparked a viral Twitter debate about whether the equation could technically be correct under different mathematical axioms, blending Orwellian politics with philosophy of math.
Overview
The equation 2 + 2 = 5 is wrong on purpose. That's the whole point. In internet culture, invoking the phrase signals that someone, whether a government, institution, or social group, is insisting you accept a blatant lie as fact. It works because every person with basic arithmetic knows the answer is four, so any demand to agree otherwise is an immediate tell for manipulation or coercion3.
The expression also found a second life in 2020 when mathematicians and political commentators clashed on Twitter over whether the equation could be "correct" under alternative definitions and axioms2. What started as a symbol of authoritarian thought control became a genuine argument about whether mathematical truth is absolute or context-dependent.
Using "two and two make five" as an example of absurdity goes back centuries. The earliest known written instance appeared in 1728, in Ephraim Chambers' *Cyclopædia*, which stated that a proposition claiming "two and two make five" would be self-evidently absurd3. Samuel Johnson made a similar observation in 1779, noting that no amount of reasoning could make two and two anything other than four3.
European writers across the 18th and 19th centuries adopted the phrase for political and philosophical arguments. Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès used it in his 1789 pamphlet *What is the Third Estate?* to mock the disproportionate voting power of the French clergy and nobility over the common people3. Victor Hugo deployed it in 1852 against supporters of Napoleon III's coup, arguing that even millions of votes cannot transform a falsehood into truth3.
Russian writers pushed the idea further. Mikhail Bakunin used "2 times 2 are 5" in 1842 to describe centrist political compromisers who split the difference between truth and lies3. Dostoevsky took a different path in *Notes from Underground* (1864), where the anonymous narrator considers accepting that twice two makes five as a kind of radical freedom, calling it "sometimes a very charming thing"3.
Albert Camus wrote in *The Plague* (1947) that times came in history when those who dared to say 2 + 2 = 4 rather than 5 were put to death3. Two years later, George Orwell published *Nineteen Eighty-Four* on June 8, 1949, and the phrase locked into its modern meaning3. In the novel, the totalitarian Party forces citizens to accept obvious falsehoods, including "two and two made five," as a test of obedience and a tool of intellectual domination2. Nearly every modern use of the phrase online traces back to Orwell's version.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
People typically use "2 + 2 = 5" in two ways:
Political shorthand: When an authority figure, government, or institution makes a claim that contradicts plain facts, respond with "2+2=5" or "We're in 2+2=5 territory." This invokes the Orwellian meaning and flags the situation as propaganda. Works in comment sections, quote-tweets, and group chats.
Math/philosophy provocation: Post the equation and argue that under certain rounding conventions, non-standard axioms, or alternative definitions of "2," "+" and "5," the statement could be valid. This reliably produces heated debate.
The expression also works as shorthand for personal situations where one person controls another's perception of reality. As one Urban Dictionary contributor put it, it can describe someone so completely under another person's influence that they'd agree to anything they're told.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Alphonse Allais published a collection of absurdist short stories titled *Deux et deux font cinq* (Two and Two Make Five) in 1895, over fifty years before Orwell wrote *Nineteen Eighty-Four*.
Russian imagist poet Vadim Shershenevich published an art manifesto titled *2 × 2 = 5* in 1920.
Dostoevsky's underground man considered the equation a kind of charm, writing that "twice two makes five is sometimes a very charming thing, too".
In Gilbert and Sullivan's *Princess Ida* (1884), the Princess boasts that women can prove "two and two make five, or three, or seven, or five-and-twenty, if the case demands".
Lord Byron wrote to his fiancée Anabella Milbanke that converting 2 and 2 into five "would give me much greater pleasure" than proving they make four.
Derivatives & Variations
Radiohead's "2 + 2 = 5":
The opening track on the 2003 album *Hail to the Thief*, drawing on Orwellian themes of surveillance and political control[1].
Collapsed Bridge Image Macro:
James Lindsay's July 2020 image pairing a "flexible math" tweet with a collapsed bridge, implying that mathematical relativism has real-world consequences[2].
"2+2=3" Shitpost:
@Noahpinion's August 2, 2020 tweet adding a third wrong answer to the discourse, deliberately escalating the absurdity[2].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (3)
- 12 + 2 = 5encyclopedia
- 22 + 2 = 5 - Urban Dictionarydictionary
- 32 + 2 = 5 - Know Your Memeencyclopedia