Skip to main content

uber-relativism

a self defining word for those so far left that they have fallen off the acceptance end of relativistic scale that they are now no longer capable of discerning between any two things.
Uber-relativism describes people that are so wishy washy that they can no longer tell right from wrong because either way something will be "discriminated" against
by SethHuhn May 2, 2011
mugGet the uber-relativism mug.

Cognitive Relativism

The view that all knowledge, concepts, and truths are constructed by the mind and are relative to the individual's or culture's perspective, framework, or conceptual scheme. There is no neutral, framework-independent way to check if our concepts "match" reality; we're always interpreting through a lens. Different frameworks create different, equally valid, cognitive realities.
Example: The concept of "justice." Cognitive relativism would argue there's no universal, mind-independent essence of justice. One culture's justice (restorative, community-based) is a fundamentally different cognitive construction than another's (retributive, individual-based). Neither is more "real"; they are products of different historical and social frameworks. Two people witnessing the same event (e.g., a political protest) will cognitively construct different events based on their pre-existing schemas.
by Abzugal January 24, 2026
mugGet the Cognitive Relativism mug.
The view that scientific knowledge is not a discovery of a pre-existing reality, but a construction deeply influenced by social, cultural, and historical contexts. Scientific "facts" and even what counts as good evidence are relative to the prevailing paradigm, worldview, or community of scientists. Truth is made, not found.
Example: Thomas Kuhn's concept of "paradigm shifts" is a classic expression of Scientific-Epistemological Relativism. Before and after the Copernican Revolution, scientists lived in different intellectual worlds with different facts. A scientific-epistemological relativist argues that the "objective" evidence was interpreted through incompatible frameworks. Similarly, modern debates (like over certain sociological theories) often involve clashes between groups with fundamentally different epistemological standards for what constitutes valid evidence.
by Abzugal January 24, 2026
mugGet the Scientific-Epistemological Relativism mug.
The meta-concept that relativism itself—the idea that truth and morality are not absolute but relative to culture or perspective—is a constructed intellectual framework that emerged in specific historical and academic contexts. It's not the "default" view of reality; it's a built tool for critiquing absolutism and colonialism. Its widespread adoption (or rejection) is a social phenomenon, showing how even our philosophies about truth are constructions of their time.
*Example: "My professor dismissed a moral critique by saying, 'That's just your Western perspective.' I hit him with the Theory of Constructed Relativism: 'Isn't your radical relativism also a product of 20th-century postmodern academia? You're using one constructed lens (relativism) to dismiss another (universal rights), pretending your lens is just the clear sky.'"*
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Constructed Relativism mug.

Cognitive Relativism

The weak version of Cognitive Realism. It proposes that our cognitive apparatus (senses, memory, language) doesn't lock us into one reality, but makes us relatively biased toward certain perceptions and interpretations. While our biology shapes and skews our view, there's still room for learning, different perspectives, and updating our mental models. It's the idea that we're wearing prescription lenses that distort, not blackout curtains that completely obscure.
Example: "Arguing about politics with my family showed Cognitive Relativism. We all watched the same debate, but our cognitive filters—shaped by different news sources, life experiences, and emotional triggers—highlighted different moments as 'key.' My reality of the event was relative to my cognitive setup, but by comparing notes, I could vaguely approximate what the 'neutral' feed might have been."
by Abzunammu February 2, 2026
mugGet the Cognitive Relativism mug.

Share this definition

Sign in to vote

We'll email you a link to sign in instantly.

Or

Check your email

We sent a link to

Open your email