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A critical theoretical approach that examines the scientific method through the lens of power, ideology, and domination—asking how the method may serve dominant interests, exclude marginalized perspectives, and reproduce social hierarchies. The critical theory of the scientific method investigates questions like: Whose interests does the method serve? What assumptions about reality, knowledge, and value are embedded in methodological standards? How does the method exclude or delegitimize alternative ways of knowing? How do power relations within science shape what counts as "good method"? How might the method be reformed to be more democratic, inclusive, and just? This approach doesn't reject the scientific method but subjects it to critique—revealing that the method is never neutral, always embedded in social contexts, and always capable of serving domination as well as liberation. Critical theory seeks not to abandon method but to transform it.
Critical Theory of the Scientific Method Example: "His critical theory of the scientific method examined how 'objectivity' standards have been used to exclude women's ways of knowing from scientific legitimacy—not because those ways are invalid, but because they don't fit methodological orthodoxies shaped by male-dominated institutions. Critique reveals what the method hides."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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Critical Contextualism

A philosophical framework holding that critique itself is context-dependent—that what counts as a critical analysis, what standards of critique apply, and what transformative possibilities exist vary with the context of power, history, and social position. Critical contextualism challenges the idea of a universal critical stance. A critique that works in one context may be irrelevant in another; a method that empowers one group may silence another. Contextualism demands that critics attend to the contexts that shape their own positions and the positions of those they critique, recognizing that critique is always critique-in-context.
Example: "His critical contextualism meant he didn't assume that the same critique of capitalism that worked in Europe would work in the Global South. Context mattered—histories, cultures, and relations of power were different."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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Critical Multicontextualism

A philosophical framework holding that critique is shaped by multiple, irreducible contexts—political, economic, cultural, historical, institutional—that interact to constitute what critique can be and do. A critical intervention emerges from the context of its historical moment, the context of social movements, the context of academic institutions, the context of media, the context of personal experience. Critical multicontextualism insists that no single context explains critique and that effective critique requires attending to this contextual multiplicity. It demands that critics be reflexive about the multiple contexts that shape their work.
Example: "Her critical multicontextualism meant she analyzed a social movement not just through its ideology, but also through the context of economic conditions, the context of media representation, the context of police response, and the context of community organizing—all of which shaped what the movement could achieve."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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Critical Perspectivism

A philosophical framework holding that critique is always from a perspective—that what a critic sees depends on their theoretical commitments, social position, historical moment, and personal experience. Critical perspectivism rejects the idea of a view from nowhere in critique. A Marxist critique sees class; a feminist critique sees gender; a postcolonial critique sees coloniality. Each perspective reveals genuine dimensions of oppression, and no perspective exhausts the whole. Perspectivism demands that critics be explicit about the perspectives from which they speak and recognize that critique is always situated.
Example: "His critical perspectivism meant he could appreciate both Marxist and feminist critiques of capitalism—not as competing for the one true analysis, but as perspectives revealing different aspects of the system."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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Critical Multiperspectivism

A philosophical framework holding that genuine critique requires multiple, irreducible critical perspectives—that no single critical lens captures the fullness of oppression and that different critical traditions are complementary rather than competitive. Critical multiperspectivism rejects the reduction of critique to any one framework (e.g., Marxism). Feminist theory, critical race theory, postcolonial theory, queer theory, disability studies, and ecological critique each reveal dimensions that others miss. This framework demands that critics cultivate pluralism, recognize that power operates across multiple axes, and that effective critique requires moving between perspectives.
Example: "Her critical multiperspectivism meant she drew on Marxism, feminism, critical race theory, and postcolonial thought in her analysis—not because she was eclectic, but because the system she was analyzing was complex enough to require all those lenses."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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critical condition

His grandma's alive, she's just in critical condition.
by CigaroCigaroCigar November 18, 2025
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medi-clinically

Describing anything medical or clinical at the same time, such as a hospital stay or treatment advice.
you: "how many days do you have to be on antibiotics?"

me: "medi-clinically speaking, 5 days; but i feel good enough not to take it"
by thecityisawake January 12, 2010
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