The theory that we see everything and understand reality through paradigms—frameworks of assumptions, concepts, values, and practices that shape what we can see and how we interpret it. The Theory of Social and Cognitive Paradigms argues that this applies to everything, including the scientific method itself, which operates within its own paradigms that change over time. There is no paradigm-free perception, no view from nowhere. What we take to be "just the facts" is always facts-as-seen-through-a-particular-paradigm. The theory explains paradigm shifts in science (Kuhn), cultural differences in perception, and the persistence of disagreement even among reasonable people. It's the foundation of humility about knowledge, the recognition that our way of seeing is one among many.
Example: "He used to think science was just accumulating facts. The Theory of Social and Cognitive Paradigms showed him otherwise: facts were always facts-within-a-paradigm. When paradigms shifted, facts shifted too. Science wasn't a straight line; it was a series of revolutions, each with its own way of seeing."
by Abzugal March 9, 2026
Get the Theory of Social and Cognitive Paradigms mug.The use of artificial intelligence as a tool to model, test, and understand the human mind. By building computational models that perform cognitive tasks—recognizing faces, making decisions, learning languages—researchers can create and test theories about how our own cognition might work. If an AI model behaves like a human under certain conditions, it might suggest that the human brain is using a similar computational strategy. It's cognitive science's most powerful laboratory.
Example: "They weren't sure how children learn grammar until they used AI applied to cognitive sciences to build a model that learned the same way, confirming their hypothesis."
by Dumu The Void March 11, 2026
Get the AI Applied to Cognitive Sciences mug.A philosophical framework holding that cognition is inherently context-dependent—that what counts as thinking, reasoning, memory, and perception varies with the contexts in which they occur. Contextualism in cognitive science challenges laboratory-based models that treat cognition as a context-independent process. A memory formed in one context is retrieved differently in another; reasoning that works in the lab fails in the wild; perception is shaped by cultural context, task context, and social context. Contextualism demands that cognitive scientists attend to the environments in which cognition actually happens, recognizing that the mind is not a context-free computer but an embodied, embedded system shaped by its surroundings.
Example: "His contextualism of the cognitive sciences meant he rejected the idea that lab studies of reasoning revealed universal mental processes. Cognition, he insisted, is always cognition-in-context—and the lab is just one context, not the neutral setting for discovering how minds work everywhere."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
Get the Contextualism of the Cognitive Sciences mug.A philosophical framework holding that our understanding of cognition is always from a perspective—that what cognitive science discovers depends on the methods, models, and theoretical frameworks it employs. Perspectives in cognitive science include computational models, neural approaches, embodied theories, extended-mind frameworks, phenomenological accounts—each revealing different aspects of cognition, each limited by its assumptions. Perspectivism doesn't claim that all accounts are equally valid, but that validity is always validity-from-a-perspective. It demands that cognitive scientists be explicit about their commitments, recognizing that the tools they choose shape what they can find.
Example: "Her perspectivism of the cognitive sciences meant she could see that computational models revealed something real about the mind, but so did phenomenological accounts of lived experience. Neither was the whole truth; each was truth-from-a-perspective."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
Get the Perspectivism of the Cognitive Sciences mug.A philosophical framework holding that cognition operates within multiple, irreducible contexts—biological, psychological, social, cultural, technological, environmental—that cannot be reduced to a single explanatory level. Multicontextualism goes beyond contextualism by insisting that contexts interact and that understanding cognition requires mapping these interactions. A cognitive process like decision-making is shaped by neural architecture, personal history, social norms, cultural values, and the tools available—all at once. Multicontextualism demands that cognitive scientists develop frameworks that can handle this complexity, rejecting reductionist programs that try to explain everything at one level.
Example: "His multicontextualism of the cognitive sciences meant he studied how people navigate not just with internal maps, but with phones, street signs, cultural norms about asking directions, and the architecture of cities—all contexts interacting to shape the cognitive process of finding one's way."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
A philosophical framework holding that understanding cognition requires multiple, irreducible perspectives—neuroscientific, psychological, computational, phenomenological, social, evolutionary—none of which can be reduced to another. Multiperspectivism rejects reductionist programs that claim one level (e.g., neural) provides the "real" explanation while others are derivative. Instead, it insists that cognition is a multi-level phenomenon that must be understood from multiple perspectives, each legitimate for its domain, each revealing aspects the others miss. This framework demands that cognitive scientists cultivate pluralism, recognizing that the mind is too complex to be captured by any single perspective.
Example: "Her multiperspectivism of the cognitive sciences meant she worked with neuroscientists, psychologists, philosophers, and anthropologists—not to find which was right, but because each perspective was needed to approach the complexity of the human mind."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
Get the Multiperspectivism of the Cognitive Sciences mug.A framework that applies cognitive science—psychology, neuroscience, cognitive anthropology—to understand how ordinary cognition operates in naturalistic settings. It moves beyond lab experiments to examine how people actually think, remember, decide, and reason while commuting, shopping, arguing online, or multitasking. The theory explores how cognitive processes are shaped by environment, emotion, social context, and technology, revealing that “everyday cognition” often differs dramatically from the idealized models of rationality. It emphasizes distributed cognition, situated action, and the ways minds are extended through tools and other people.
Theory of Everyday Cognitive Sciences Example: “The theory of everyday cognitive sciences showed that people’s memory for news headlines was heavily influenced by whether the headline aligned with their prior beliefs—even when they swore they were being objective.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 25, 2026
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