n. When your interlocutor tells you a lie *so* bad that it contradicts something else they just said.
Katie: "So Robby told me a contrafiction about how he got a flat on his way to work; but he doesn't even have a car."
by anonymous February 17, 2026
Get the Contrafiction mug.The philosophical view that knowledge, truth, and meaning are fundamentally context-dependent—that what counts as true, what counts as known, what counts as meaningful varies with context. Contextualism argues that there is no such thing as truth simpliciter; there is only truth-in-context. A statement can be true in one context, false in another, meaningless in a third. Contextualism doesn't say that truth is arbitrary; it says that truth is always truth-for-some-purpose, truth-under-some-conditions, truth-within-some-framework. It's the philosophy of situational awareness, of the recognition that meaning is made, not found—and made differently in different situations.
Example: "She used to think truth was truth, same everywhere. Contextualism showed her otherwise: 'It's cold' is true in a snowstorm, false in a sauna—same words, different contexts, different truths. Truth wasn't absolute; it was situational. She stopped looking for context-free truth and started paying attention to where she was standing."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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The systematic elaboration of contextualism as a framework for understanding knowledge, truth, and meaning. Contextualist Theory argues that all cognitive claims are context-bound—that the conditions under which a claim is made, the purposes for which it's made, the audience to which it's addressed all shape what the claim means and whether it's true. It develops the implications of this insight across domains: epistemology (knowledge attributions vary with context), semantics (meaning varies with context), ethics (moral judgments vary with context). Contextualist Theory doesn't collapse into relativism because it recognizes that contexts are structured, that some contexts are more appropriate than others, that context-sensitivity is not arbitrariness.
Example: "He'd been frustrated by arguments that seemed to go nowhere. Contextualist Theory showed him why: each person was speaking from a different context, assuming their context was universal. The arguments weren't about truth; they were about which context should prevail. He stopped trying to prove his context right and started explaining where he was standing."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
Get the Contextualist Theory mug.A scientific approach that treats results as contingent on specific historical, environmental, and contextual conditions that might not hold elsewhere or elsewhen. It rejects the assumption that findings should replicate everywhere forever, instead asking: under what conditions does this hold? What had to be true for this result to appear? Contingency Method is essential for historical sciences like evolutionary biology or cosmology, where you can't rerun the tape and see if things turn out the same way. It produces knowledge that comes with an expiration date and a location stamp—not because it's bad science, but because reality itself is contingent.
"We found this amazing result in 2020, tried to replicate in 2021, and failed completely. Contingency Scientific Method says: maybe the finding was contingent on pandemic conditions that no longer exist. Science isn't broken—reality just changed."
by Dumu The Void February 23, 2026
Get the Contingency Scientific Method mug.by AD_Ridgeport February 28, 2026
Get the Context Drop mug.A bias where one automatically contests, challenges, or disputes any information that doesn't align with preexisting views. Contestation Bias doesn't just ignore opposing evidence; it actively fights it, demanding impossible standards, shifting goalposts, and finding reasons to reject. It's the bias of perpetual opposition—the mind that says "no" before hearing the question.
"Every study she cited, he contested. Methodology, sample size, funding source—always a reason to reject. Contestation Bias isn't skepticism; it's automatic opposition. Not "show me evidence," but "your evidence is never enough." The contest is the point; truth is secondary."
by Dumu The Void March 4, 2026
Get the Contestation Bias mug.A synthetic approach that seeks to bridge the divide between Continental and Analytic philosophical traditions, drawing on the strengths of both. Continental-Analytic Philosophy combines the Continental focus on history, culture, and power with the Analytic commitment to clarity, argument, and precision. It recognizes that both traditions have valuable insights and that the divide between them has been historically exaggerated and philosophically unproductive. Continental-Analytic Philosophy is the philosophy of reconciliation, of synthesis, of recognizing that there are many ways to do philosophy and that we need them all.
Example: "He'd been trained in the Analytic tradition and dismissed Continental philosophy as mush. Then he encountered Continental-Analytic Philosophy and saw what he'd been missing: the insights of Foucault and Derrida, expressed with clarity and rigor. The synthesis wasn't compromise; it was enrichment."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
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