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epistemology

Structure of verification.

Also: the study of a structure of verification.

Meta-structure.
The blockchain is an example of an epistemology.

Epistemology can also be the study of blockchain and structures of verification related to it.
by sandraxine August 30, 2018
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Epistemology

That's an example of Epistemology
by notaNerd233 March 26, 2024
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Epistemology Industry

A sardonic label for the academic meta-enterprise of endlessly theorizing about knowledge itself. It points to the potential for scholarship in philosophy and social studies of science to become a self-referential, jargon-laden system focused more on internal debates, career-building, and generating complex theories than on clarifying how we know things in the practical world.
*Example: Writing a 400-page treatise deploying Epistemology Industry jargon to deconstruct the "socio-technical imaginaries of evidence-production" in a field you've never actually worked in, all to secure tenure, while a farmer's practical, life-saving knowledge of climate patterns is ignored because it wasn't produced within the industry.*
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 6, 2026
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Epistemology Biases

Biases in how we study knowledge itself—the assumptions and preferences that shape epistemological inquiry. Epistemology Biases include: privileging Western epistemology over others; focusing on propositional knowledge over procedural, tacit, or experiential knowledge; assuming knowledge is individual rather than social; treating justification as more important than understanding; ignoring the role of power in knowledge production. Epistemology Biases shape what questions get asked, what answers count, and who gets to be an epistemologist.
Epistemology Biases "Your epistemology class only studied Descartes, Hume, and Kant. That's Epistemology Bias—assuming Western philosophy is epistemology, not one epistemology among many. Indigenous epistemologies? Ignored. Feminist epistemology? Optional. Eastern epistemology? Comparative philosophy. Epistemology bias makes the discipline smaller than the phenomenon it studies."
by Dumu The Void March 1, 2026
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Epistemology Metabiases

Second-order biases about epistemology itself—systematic distortions in how we study knowledge. Epistemology Metabiases include: assuming Western epistemology is epistemology, not one tradition; treating knowledge as individual rather than social; focusing on propositional knowledge while ignoring procedural, tacit, experiential; believing that epistemological questions are timeless rather than historical; ignoring the role of power in knowledge production. Epistemology Metabiases shape what questions get asked, what counts as an answer, and who gets to be an epistemologist.
Epistemology Metabiases "Your epistemology class only studied Descartes to Kant. That's Epistemology Metabias—treating Western philosophy as the whole story. Epistemology means study of knowledge, not study of European theories of knowledge. The metabias is thinking your tradition is the tradition, not one tradition among many."
by Dumu The Void March 1, 2026
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Epistemology Power

The most fundamental form of intellectual power: the power to define what counts as knowledge, truth, and valid evidence in the first place. Those who hold epistemology power get to set the rules of the game before anyone even starts playing. They decide whether revelation, tradition, empirical data, or personal experience is the gold standard for "knowing." To control epistemology is to control the very framework through which reality is understood.
Example: "By dismissing her lived experience as 'anecdotal,' he was exercising epistemology power—asserting that his kind of data was the only kind that counted as real knowledge."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
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Epistemology of Science

A branch of philosophy and metascience that examines the epistemological foundations, assumptions, and implications of scientific knowledge—asking not just what science discovers but how scientific claims are justified, what counts as evidence, how theories are validated, and what kind of knowledge science actually produces. The epistemology of science investigates the standards, methods, and criteria that distinguish scientific knowledge from other forms of knowing; the relationship between observation and theory; the nature of scientific explanation; the problem of induction; the status of unobservable entities; and the grounds for scientific realism or anti-realism. It also examines how epistemological standards vary across disciplines and historical periods, how scientific consensus is achieved, and how scientific knowledge relates to other knowledge systems. The epistemology of science is science reflecting on its own knowing—the study of how science knows what it claims to know.
Example: "Her epistemology of science work challenged the assumption that all scientific knowledge is fundamentally similar—showing that what counts as 'evidence' in particle physics looks very different from what counts as 'evidence' in evolutionary biology, and that imposing uniform standards distorts both."
by Dumu The Void March 16, 2026
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