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Epistemological Relativism

The view that knowledge claims are relative to conceptual frameworks, cultural contexts, or epistemic systems—what counts as knowledge in one framework may not in another. This is often misunderstood as "everything is equally true," which is not the claim. The claim is that evaluation happens within frameworks, and frameworks themselves are not neutrally comparable. Astrology is knowledge within its framework; astronomy within its. They're not both true in the same way—they're knowledge relative to different systems. The relativism is about frameworks, not facts.
"Is this plant medicinal or poisonous? Epistemological Relativism says: it depends on your knowledge system. In Western pharmacology, it's poisonous. In traditional herbalism, it's medicine properly prepared. Both are knowledge relative to their frameworks. The question isn't which is 'true'—it's which framework fits your situation."
by Abzugal February 23, 2026
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Extended Relativity Theory

A generalization of Einstein's relativity proposing that relativity extends beyond motion and gravity to include other frames—reference frames based on scale, complexity, or consciousness. Extended Relativity suggests that just as motion is relative, so might be size (scale relativity), information (informational relativity), or even perspective (perspectival relativity). The theory unifies different kinds of relativity under a single framework: everything is relative to something. Einstein started it; Extended Relativity finishes it—relativity all the way down.
Extended Relativity Theory "Einstein said motion is relative. Extended Relativity says scale is relative too—physics looks different at quantum and cosmic scales, but neither is more fundamental. Relativity isn't just about velocity; it's about everything. The universe is a web of relations; Extended Relativity maps them all."
by Dumu The Void March 5, 2026
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Outer Relativity Theory

A synthesis of Outer Spacetime and Extended Relativity, proposing that relativity itself extends beyond our spacetime—that there may be frames of reference outside our observable universe, and that physical laws are relative to the spacetime manifold one inhabits. Outer Relativity suggests that what we call "universal" laws might be local to our cosmic neighborhood. Beyond our spacetime, different relativities apply. It's relativity applied to the multiverse: every universe has its own relativity.
"Our laws of physics might be local bylaws, not universal absolutes. Outer Relativity Theory says: different spacetimes, different relativities. What's constant here might vary there. Relativity doesn't stop at the cosmic horizon; it extends beyond—to outer relativity."
by Dumu The Void March 5, 2026
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Classical Relativism

The foundational form of relativism, originating with the Sophists in ancient Greece and revived in various forms throughout Western philosophy. Classical Relativism argues that truth, knowledge, and values are relative to individuals, cultures, or contexts—that there is no universal standard by which all claims can be judged. Protagoras's famous dictum—"man is the measure of all things"—captures the classical spirit. Classical Relativism was a challenge to absolute claims, a weapon against dogma, a defense of diversity. It remains the source from which all later relativisms flow.
Example: "He read Protagoras and felt the shock of the new: truth relative to the knower, values relative to the culture, no view from nowhere. Classical Relativism was ancient but not dated—it spoke directly to his experience of a world where people saw things so differently. The questions were old; the relevance was new."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
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Neoclassical Relativism

A contemporary revival of classical relativism, adapting its insights to modern conditions while avoiding its pitfalls. Neoclassical Relativism accepts the core relativist insight—that truth and values are context-dependent—while rejecting the extreme conclusion that all views are equally valid. It develops criteria for evaluating perspectives within contexts, for comparing across contexts, for making judgments without absolutes. Neoclassical Relativism is relativism with standards, pluralism with teeth, the recognition that different doesn't mean equal.
Example: "He'd been attracted to relativism but troubled by its 'anything goes' implications. Neoclassical Relativism gave him a way forward: different contexts, different truths—but within contexts, some truths were better than others. He could respect diversity without giving up on judgment."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
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Postclassical Relativism

An emerging form of relativism that moves beyond classical debates to engage new challenges—the Anthropocene, artificial intelligence, post-humanism. Postclassical Relativism asks what relativism means when the "human" is no longer the measure, when "culture" is no longer the primary context, when "truth" itself is being transformed by technology. It's relativism for a world where the very categories of relativism are breaking down—a philosophy for the post-everything era.
Example: "AI could generate truths no human had ever considered; virtual realities offered experiences no culture had ever imagined. Postclassical Relativism asked new questions: relative to what, when the 'what' is no longer human? It was relativism evolved, for a world that had evolved beyond its founders' imaginations."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
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Cognitive Relativism

A weak form of cognitive realism, acknowledging that cognition shapes perception but stopping short of strong conclusions about the implications. Cognitive Relativism accepts that different cognitive systems might produce different experiences of reality—that a bee sees ultraviolet, a bat echolocates, a human perceives color—but doesn't draw strong epistemological conclusions from this diversity. It's cognitive realism for those who want to acknowledge the role of the brain without embracing the full implications of cognitive mediation. Cognitive Relativism is the position that "we all see things differently because of how our brains work" without pushing further into questions about truth, knowledge, or reality.
Example: "He acknowledged that different species perceived the world differently, but he stopped there. Cognitive Relativism let him note the diversity without questioning his own access to reality. Bees saw ultraviolet, but he saw things as they really were. The relativism was for others, not for him."
by Abzugal March 9, 2026
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