Skip to main content
A philosophical framework holding that the grounds of knowledge claims should be made explicit and open to scrutiny. It opposes appeals to hidden intuition, unspoken authority, or privileged access. The theory demands that any knowledge claim be accompanied by a clear account of how it was justified, what evidence supports it, and what assumptions it rests on. In practice, it encourages reflexivity—knowers must reveal their epistemic positions, not hide behind “objectivity.”
Example: “Her theory of epistemological transparency required that in cross‑cultural research, she explicitly state her own cultural framework, so readers could see how it shaped her interpretation.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Epistemological Transparency mug.
A critical framework analyzing how one system of knowing—typically Western, empirical, and individualistic—achieves dominance over others, not by proving its superiority but through social and historical processes. It examines how colonialism, education, and institutional structures embedded specific epistemic norms as universal, while devaluing oral traditions, embodied knowledge, and collective ways of knowing. Epistemological hegemony operates invisibly, shaping what counts as “rational,” “objective,” and “credible.”
Example: “Her theory of epistemological hegemony traced how the spread of European universities imposed a specific model of knowledge production globally, rendering local knowledge systems ‘unscientific’ and effectively erasing them.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Epistemological Hegemony mug.

Philosophy of Epistemology

A meta‑philosophical field that reflects on epistemology itself—its aims, methods, and fundamental concepts. It asks: What is knowledge? What is justification? Is epistemology a normative or descriptive discipline? Can epistemology be naturalized? It also examines the relationship between epistemology and other fields like metaphysics, ethics, and cognitive science. It’s epistemology turned upon itself.
Example: “His philosophy of epistemology work questioned whether the entire project of seeking a theory of knowledge was itself misguided, proposing instead that we focus on epistemic practices and their social contexts.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
mugGet the Philosophy of Epistemology mug.

Sociology of Epistemology

A reflexive field that examines epistemology as a social activity—how epistemic communities form, how they define what counts as knowledge, how they enforce standards, and how epistemological claims are shaped by institutional and cultural contexts. It draws on the sociology of knowledge, science studies, and feminist epistemology to show that epistemology is not a timeless, abstract discipline but a socially situated practice with its own power dynamics.
Example: “Her sociology of epistemology work demonstrated that 20th‑century analytic epistemology’s focus on individual knowers and formal justification reflected the social position of its practitioners—mostly male academics with the luxury of ignoring collective and embodied knowing.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
mugGet the Sociology of Epistemology mug.

Anthropology of Epistemology

The study of how different cultures and communities define, justify, and transmit knowledge—an empirical investigation into the social and material conditions of knowing. Anthropologists of epistemology treat epistemology not as an abstract philosophical discipline but as a lived practice: they examine how people decide who is a reliable knower, how truth is verified, how memory is constructed, and how knowledge is embedded in institutions, objects, and rituals. It is the anthropological counterpart to philosophy of epistemology, grounding epistemic questions in ethnographic reality.
Example: “His anthropology of epistemology research showed that in a Mayan community, knowing was not a mental state but a relationship of responsibility—one ‘knew’ a field if one had tended it, tying knowledge to embodied care rather than propositional certainty.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
mugGet the Anthropology of Epistemology mug.
The study of how epistemic practices—what counts as knowledge, who is considered a knower—are shaped by social structures, power, and institutions. It draws on the sociology of knowledge, feminist epistemology, and science and technology studies to analyze how epistemic authority is produced, how marginalized groups are excluded from knowledge production, and how epistemic justice can be pursued.
Example: “Social sciences of epistemology research showed that medical knowledge historically excluded women’s bodies as sources of legitimate knowledge, leading to systematic misdiagnosis and under‑treatment.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
mugGet the Social Sciences of Epistemology mug.
A field that uses history, philosophy, literature, and cultural criticism to examine epistemology as a human endeavor—how knowledge claims have been made, contested, and institutionalized across time and cultures. It explores the relationship between epistemology and power, the role of narrative in shaping what counts as knowledge, and the ethical dimensions of knowing. It also engages with non‑Western epistemological traditions.
Example: “Her human sciences of epistemology work compared Western scientific epistemology with Indigenous knowledge practices, showing that each is embedded in distinct histories, values, and relationships to land and community—not reducible to a single universal standard.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
mugGet the Human Sciences of Epistemology 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