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Multipersonal

Having multiple facets or dimensions to one’s identity, personality, or existence; embracing the complexity and coexistence of different, and sometimes contrasting, qualities, emotions, or behaviors within oneself. Reflecting the idea that a person cannot be defined by a single characteristic or role.
Casual Use:
"I’m not just one thing—I’m multipersonal. Some days I’m calm and collected, and other days I’m a total whirlwind, and that’s okay."

Professional Context:
"The team loved her multipersonal approach to leadership, balancing compassion with assertiveness seamlessly."

Relationships:
"In our marriage, we’ve learned to embrace each other’s multipersonal nature—it’s what makes us dynamic and keeps our connection alive."

Social Media Post:
"Learning to love my multipersonal self means celebrating my kindness, confronting my fears, and owning my flaws. I’m all of it, and that’s enough.

Therapeutic Setting:
"Part of self-acceptance is recognizing that we’re all multipersonal—holding space for our strengths and our shadows without judgment."
by Clover Rae December 16, 2024
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multisexual

People of any gender who are attracted to more than one gender.
Multisexual.
by Fizogobo January 31, 2025
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Multiplication

Double negatives are always a positive
I need some multiplication in my life.
by wh0re_iffic February 9, 2026
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Multiperspectivism

A comprehensive philosophical framework holding that reality, knowledge, and value are inherently multiple—that they can and should be understood through multiple legitimate perspectives, none of which exhausts the whole, and that genuine understanding requires engaging with this multiplicity. Multiperspectivism goes beyond acknowledging that people have different perspectives to insist that the world itself sustains multiple valid perspectives—that reality is rich enough to be seen in many ways, that different questions reveal different aspects, that different frameworks illuminate different dimensions. This framework draws on examples across domains: light as wave and particle; mind as brain and experience; society as structure and interaction; truth as correspondence and coherence and pragmatics. Multiperspectivism doesn't claim that all perspectives are equally valid—some are distorted, some are partial, some are wrong. But it insists that validity is plural, that the goal is not to find the one true perspective but to understand how perspectives relate, complement, and sometimes correct each other. In a multiperspectivist view, wisdom is the capacity to see through many eyes.
Example: "His multiperspectivism meant he could appreciate both scientific and artistic understandings of a landscape—not as competitors for truth, but as different ways of seeing, each revealing something the other couldn't. The mountain was both geology and meaning, and you needed both perspectives to really see it."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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A philosophical framework holding that the social sciences require multiple, irreducible perspectives—that social reality is too complex to be captured by any single theoretical framework, methodological approach, or standpoint. Multiperspectivism goes beyond perspectivism by insisting that multiple perspectives are not just inevitable but necessary for adequate understanding. A society cannot be understood through economics alone, nor through culture alone, nor through power alone; each perspective reveals something the others miss, and integration requires holding multiple perspectives together. This framework demands that social scientists be pluralists in their theoretical commitments, drawing on multiple traditions rather than defending a single orthodoxy, and recognizing that the richness of social life exceeds any single framework's grasp.
Example: "Her multiperspectivism of the social sciences meant she drew on feminist theory, critical race theory, Marxism, and postcolonial thought—not as competing truths but as complementary lenses. Each illuminated aspects the others left in shadow, and together they revealed what no single perspective could."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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A philosophical framework holding that the humanities require multiple, irreducible perspectives—that texts, histories, and artifacts sustain a plurality of valid interpretations that cannot be reduced to a single account. Multiperspectivism goes beyond perspectivism by insisting that multiple perspectives are not just inevitable but essential to humanistic understanding. A great novel means different things to different readers across time and culture; a historical event looks different from the perspective of victors and vanquished; a painting speaks differently to different traditions of criticism. Multiperspectivism demands that humanists cultivate the capacity to see through many eyes, to hold multiple interpretations in tension, and to recognize that the richness of human meaning exceeds any single frame.
Example: "Her multiperspectivism of the humanities meant she could read the same poem through biographical criticism, formalist analysis, Marxist theory, and queer theory—not because she didn't know which was right, but because each revealed something the others missed, and together they approached the poem's fullness."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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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
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