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A philosophical framework holding that understanding the natural world requires multiple, irreducible scientific perspectives—that the complexity of nature exceeds any single disciplinary approach. Multiperspectivism rejects reductionist programs that try to explain all phenomena at one level (e.g., physics). It insists that biological, chemical, geological, and physical perspectives each reveal genuine aspects of reality, and that integration requires holding multiple perspectives together. This framework demands that natural scientists respect disciplinary diversity, recognizing that the richness of nature is reflected in the plurality of sciences.
Example: "Her multiperspectivism of the natural sciences meant she saw ecology, molecular biology, and evolutionary theory not as competing explanations for life, but as complementary perspectives—each essential, none sufficient alone."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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A philosophical framework holding that mathematics and logic are context-dependent—that what counts as a proof, what systems are considered valid, what methods are rigorous varies with historical and cultural context. Contextualism challenges the view of mathematics as timeless and culture-free. Proof standards change; axioms that seemed self-evident become questionable; what counts as a legitimate mathematical object expands over time. Contextualism doesn't deny that mathematics discovers necessary truths, but insists that discovery happens in context, and that the form of mathematics reflects the contexts of its development.
Example: "His contextualism of the exact sciences meant he studied how the concept of proof changed from Euclid to Hilbert to computer-assisted proofs—not as decline or progress, but as adaptation to different contexts and purposes."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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A philosophical framework holding that mathematics and logic are always from a perspective—that what a mathematician sees depends on their theoretical commitments, their choice of axioms, their research program. Perspectivism rejects the idea that mathematics is a single edifice of timeless truth. Different mathematical frameworks (classical, intuitionistic, constructive) reveal different aspects of mathematical reality; different logical systems (classical, paraconsistent, modal) are appropriate for different purposes. Perspectivism demands that mathematicians and logicians be explicit about their frameworks, recognizing that perspective shapes what can be proved.
Example: "Her perspectivism of the exact sciences meant she could work in both classical and intuitionistic logic—not because she was inconsistent, but because each was a perspective suited to different problems."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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A philosophical framework holding that mathematics and logic operate within multiple, irreducible contexts—practical, theoretical, cultural, technological—that shape what mathematics becomes. A mathematical concept emerges from the context of practical problems, the context of available notation, the context of institutional training, the context of cultural values, the context of technological possibilities. Multicontextualism insists that understanding the exact sciences requires attending to this contextual multiplicity.
Example: "His multicontextualism of the exact sciences meant he studied the development of calculus not just through Newton and Leibniz, but through the context of navigation, the context of commerce, the context of available notation, the context of university structures—all of which shaped what calculus became."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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A philosophical framework holding that mathematical and logical reality is sufficiently rich to sustain multiple, irreducible perspectives—different axiomatic systems, different foundations, different research programs. Multiperspectivism rejects the idea that there is one true mathematics. Set theory, category theory, type theory are different perspectives on mathematical structure; classical logic, intuitionistic logic, linear logic are different perspectives on reasoning. This framework demands that mathematicians and logicians be pluralists, recognizing that the richness of their subject exceeds any single foundation.
Example: "Her multiperspectivism of the exact sciences meant she worked across algebraic geometry and category theory, drawing on both perspectives—not because she couldn't choose, but because each revealed structures the other left invisible."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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A philosophical framework holding that formal systems—logic, mathematics, computer science, information theory—are context-dependent in their meaning and application. What a formal system means depends on the context of its interpretation; what counts as a valid derivation depends on the context of its rules; what a formalism is useful for depends on the context of its application. Contextualism in the formal sciences opposes the idea that formal systems have meaning independent of their use. It insists that formalisms are tools whose significance emerges in context.
Example: "His contextualism of the formal sciences meant he rejected the idea that formal logic alone determines meaning. The same logical formula means different things in a programming language, a philosophical argument, and a legal document—context determines interpretation."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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A philosophical framework holding that formal systems are always from a perspective—that what a formalism reveals depends on the perspective from which it is developed and applied. Different logical systems reveal different aspects of reasoning; different programming paradigms reveal different aspects of computation; different formal frameworks make different phenomena visible. Perspectivism demands that formal scientists be explicit about their frameworks, recognizing that the formalisms they choose shape what they can express.
Example: "Her perspectivism of the formal sciences meant she saw functional programming, object-oriented programming, and logic programming not as competing for the one true way to compute, but as different perspectives on computation—each suited to different problems."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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