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Infrascientific Literacy

The ability to understand the infrastructure that underlies scientific work—laboratories, equipment, databases, funding systems, institutional policies, and communication networks. Infrascientific literacy recognizes that science does not happen in a vacuum; it depends on material and social supports that shape what research is possible, who gets to do it, and what findings emerge. It is essential for science policy, research ethics, and navigating the practical realities of scientific careers.
Example: “His infrascientific literacy helped him explain why some fields advanced faster than others: not because of intellectual merit, but because particle physics had massive infrastructure while marine biology relied on patchy funding.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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Metaepistemological Literacy

The ability to reflect on the standards and frameworks used to evaluate knowledge claims. It involves understanding that epistemology itself has different schools (foundationalism, coherentism, reliabilism, etc.) and that criteria for “good knowledge” are not universal but historically and socially situated. Metaepistemological literacy helps one recognize when debates about knowledge are really about unstated assumptions.
Metaepistemological Literacy Example: “Her metaepistemological literacy revealed that the argument over ‘evidence’ was actually a clash between two epistemological traditions—one demanding randomized trials, the other valuing ethnographic depth.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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The capacity to understand the infrastructure that enables knowing—libraries, databases, educational systems, peer networks, and the material conditions of knowledge production. It extends epistemology by asking: what must exist for knowledge to be possible? Infraepistemological literacy is essential for understanding epistemic injustice, digital divides, and why certain forms of knowledge are marginalized.
Infraepistemological Literacy Example: “His infraepistemological literacy showed that indigenous knowledge wasn’t ignored because it was unscientific, but because it lacked the institutional infrastructure—archives, funding, journals—that made Western knowledge ‘official.’”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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Metalogical Literacy

The ability to understand and evaluate logical systems themselves—their axioms, rules, semantics, and limits. It includes familiarity with concepts like completeness, consistency, decidability, and the differences between classical, intuitionistic, paraconsistent, and modal logics. Metalogical literacy allows one to choose appropriate logical tools for different problems and to avoid treating one logic as “the” logic.
Metalogical Literacy Example: “Her metalogical literacy helped her see that the debate about contradictions was not resolvable by classical logic alone; she introduced paraconsistent logic to handle inconsistent information without collapse.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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Infralogical Literacy

The ability to understand the infrastructure that makes logical reasoning possible—the notation systems, educational practices, institutional frameworks, and social conventions that shape how logic is taught, used, and valued. Infralogical literacy reveals that logic is not a pure, abstract enterprise but a human practice embedded in material and social conditions.
Infralogical Literacy Example: “His infralogical literacy explained why Western formal logic became dominant: not because it was inherently superior, but because it was embedded in university curricula, textbooks, and bureaucratic systems that spread globally.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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Metarational Literacy

The capacity to reflect on the nature, limits, and diversity of rationality itself. A metarationally literate person understands that there is no single, universal “reason” but multiple rationalities adapted to different contexts—scientific, legal, moral, everyday. They can evaluate when different standards of reason apply, recognize the historical and cultural formation of rational norms, and critically assess claims that equate their own rationality with Reason itself.
Example: “Her metarational literacy helped her navigate the debate between economists and ecologists: she saw that both were rational, but each operated within different frameworks of value, time, and evidence.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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Infrarational Literacy

The ability to understand the infrastructure that makes rationality possible—the material, social, and cognitive conditions under which reasoning occurs. It includes awareness of how education, language, technology, and institutions shape what counts as reasonable. Infrarational literacy reveals that rationality is not a disembodied ideal but a practice embedded in concrete systems of knowledge transmission, power, and material resources.
Example: “His infrarational literacy showed that ‘critical thinking’ programs failed in underfunded schools not because students were incapable, but because the infrastructure—class size, teacher training, resources—was absent.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
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