Scientific Multicontextualism
A philosophical framework holding that scientific knowledge operates within multiple, irreducible contexts—technological, institutional, historical, cultural, economic—that interact to shape what science becomes. Multicontextualism goes beyond contextualism by insisting that no single context explains scientific practice. A discovery emerges from the context of available instruments, the context of research funding, the context of disciplinary training, the context of social values, the context of historical moment—all at once. Understanding science requires mapping how these contexts interrelate and how they collectively constitute the conditions of scientific possibility. This framework demands that historians and sociologists of science develop methods capable of handling contextual complexity, rejecting reductionist attempts to explain science by appealing to a single factor.
Example: "Her scientific multicontextualism meant she studied the discovery of the structure of DNA not just through the laboratory context, but also through the political context of postwar Britain, the institutional context of Cambridge, the technological context of X-ray crystallography, and the cultural context of scientific competition—all of which shaped what was found."
Scientific Multicontextualism by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
Get the Scientific Multicontextualism mug.