The theory that all knowledge is situated—known from somewhere, by someone, with particular tools and assumptions. There's no knowledge from the view from nowhere, no God's-eye truth. But situated doesn't mean trapped—it means located. And locations can be compared, combined, critiqued. Epistemological Perspectivism studies how perspective shapes knowledge, how to translate between perspectives, and how to build knowledge that incorporates multiple standpoints without pretending to transcend them all.
Epistemological Perspectivism "You keep claiming your knowledge is just 'the truth,' not a perspective. Epistemological Perspectivism says: you're standing somewhere, seeing from somewhere, shaped by somewhere. That's not a problem—it's just reality. The problem is pretending you're not standing anywhere, because then you can't see your own blind spots."
by Dumu The Void February 24, 2026
Get the Epistemological Perspectivism mug.The view that logical systems themselves are perspectives on reasoning, not the final truth about how to think. Classical logic, fuzzy logic, paraconsistent logic, intuitionistic logic—each is a tool, suited to different domains, revealing different aspects of valid inference. Logical Perspectivism doesn't claim logic is arbitrary—it claims logic is plural, that different logical perspectives are appropriate for different problems, and that the choice of logic is itself a substantive decision. There's no logic of everything—only logics for specific purposes.
"You're using classical logic on a quantum problem? Logical Perspectivism says: wrong tool. Classical logic assumes excluded middle; quantum mechanics violates it. You need a different logical perspective. Logic isn't one thing—it's a toolkit. Use the right tool or build nonsense."
by Dumu The Void February 24, 2026
Get the Logical Perspectivism mug.Related Words
A philosophical position holding that scientific knowledge is always from a perspective—that what scientists discover depends on their theoretical frameworks, methodological commitments, cultural contexts, and modes of engagement with reality. Scientific perspectivism draws on insights from the history and sociology of science (different eras and cultures have different sciences), from cognitive science (perception and reasoning are theory-laden), and from philosophy of science (observation is always interpreted through concepts). It suggests that no single scientific account captures the whole truth about reality—different perspectives reveal different aspects, and the idea of a "view from nowhere" is an illusion. This doesn't make scientific knowledge arbitrary or subjective; it makes it situated. Understanding scientific perspectivism means recognizing that science is always science-from-a-point-of-view, and that embracing multiple perspectives yields richer understanding than insisting on a single absolute account.
Example: "Her scientific perspectivism meant she saw quantum mechanics and general relativity not as competitors for a single truth but as complementary perspectives—each revealing aspects of reality the other misses. The goal wasn't to find the one true theory but to understand how perspectives relate."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
Get the Scientific Perspectivism mug.A philosophical framework holding that scientific knowledge is always from a perspective—that what scientists discover depends on their theories, instruments, conceptual frameworks, and social standpoints. Scientific perspectivism rejects the ideal of a "view from nowhere," insisting that scientific objectivity is achieved from particular perspectives, not from nowhere. A physicist studying quantum phenomena sees differently than a biologist studying cells; a researcher from a marginalized community asks different questions than an outsider; a theory framed through one metaphor reveals what another hides. Perspectivism doesn't make science subjective; it recognizes that all knowledge is situated and that perspective is not a flaw but a condition of seeing. It demands that scientists be reflective about the perspectives that shape their work.
Example: "His scientific perspectivism meant he saw particle physics and condensed matter physics not as competing for a single truth, but as different perspectives on physical reality—each revealing aspects the other misses, each essential for a fuller understanding."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
Get the Scientific Perspectivism mug.A philosophical framework holding that logic is always from a perspective—that what a logical system reveals depends on the theoretical commitments, metaphysical assumptions, and practical purposes from which it is developed. Logical perspectivism rejects the idea that there is one true logic that captures the structure of reasoning itself. Different logical systems (classical, intuitionistic, linear, modal, paraconsistent) offer different perspectives on reasoning, each illuminating aspects the others leave in shadow. Perspectivism doesn't make logic subjective; it recognizes that logical validity is always validity-from-a-perspective and that the richness of reasoning exceeds any single system. It demands that logicians be explicit about the perspective from which they work.
Example: "His logical perspectivism meant he could work in both classical and intuitionistic logic—not because he was inconsistent, but because each was a perspective suited to different problems: classical for mathematics, intuitionistic for constructive proof."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
Get the Logical Perspectivism mug.A philosophical framework holding that physical knowledge is always from a perspective—that what physicists discover depends on their theoretical frameworks, experimental setups, and conceptual commitments. Physical perspectivism rejects the idea of a final, absolute description of physical reality from no standpoint. A particle physicist sees the world through the lens of quantum field theory; a cosmologist through general relativity; a condensed matter physicist through many-body physics. Each perspective reveals genuine aspects of reality, and no perspective is the view from nowhere. Perspectivism demands that physicists be reflective about the perspectives that shape their work and recognize that the richness of physical reality exceeds any single frame.
Example: "His physical perspectivism meant he saw quantum mechanics and classical mechanics not as competitors for the one true description, but as different perspectives on physical reality—each appropriate to its domain, each limited to its perspective."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
Get the Physical Perspectivism mug.A philosophical framework holding that our understanding of matter is always from a perspective—that what we take matter to be depends on the scientific framework, cultural background, and practical purposes from which we approach it. A physicist sees matter as fields and particles; a chemist as elements and compounds; a biologist as cells and tissues; a craftsman as wood and metal. Material perspectivism doesn't make matter subjective; it recognizes that each perspective reveals genuine aspects, and that no perspective exhausts what matter is. It demands that we be reflective about the perspectives that shape our understanding of materiality.
Example: "His material perspectivism meant he could appreciate both the scientific account of water as H₂O and the indigenous account of water as a living being—not as competing truths, but as truths from different perspectives, each valuable for different purposes."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
Get the Material Perspectivism mug.