A philosophical framework holding that cognition is inherently context-dependent—that what counts as thinking, reasoning, memory, and perception varies with the contexts in which they occur. Contextualism in cognitive science challenges laboratory-based models that treat cognition as a context-independent process. A memory formed in one context is retrieved differently in another; reasoning that works in the lab fails in the wild; perception is shaped by cultural context, task context, and social context. Contextualism demands that cognitive scientists attend to the environments in which cognition actually happens, recognizing that the mind is not a context-free computer but an embodied, embedded system shaped by its surroundings.
Example: "His contextualism of the cognitive sciences meant he rejected the idea that lab studies of reasoning revealed universal mental processes. Cognition, he insisted, is always cognition-in-context—and the lab is just one context, not the neutral setting for discovering how minds work everywhere."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
Get the Contextualism of the Cognitive Sciences mug.A philosophical framework holding that natural science knowledge is context-dependent—that what counts as good science, valid experiment, acceptable theory varies with historical, technological, and social contexts. Contextualism challenges the image of science as a timeless, context-free pursuit of truth. The experiments possible in one era depend on available technology; the theories accepted depend on what questions seem important; the methods considered rigorous evolve over time. Contextualism doesn't deny that science discovers real features of the world, but insists that discovery is always discovery-in-context. It demands that natural scientists and historians attend to the conditions that make scientific knowledge possible.
Example: "His contextualism of the natural sciences meant he studied how the development of the telescope didn't just reveal the heavens—it created new kinds of observation, new questions, new standards for what counted as evidence. The context shaped the science."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
Get the Contextualism of the Natural Sciences mug.A philosophical framework holding that mathematics and logic are context-dependent—that what counts as a proof, what systems are considered valid, what methods are rigorous varies with historical and cultural context. Contextualism challenges the view of mathematics as timeless and culture-free. Proof standards change; axioms that seemed self-evident become questionable; what counts as a legitimate mathematical object expands over time. Contextualism doesn't deny that mathematics discovers necessary truths, but insists that discovery happens in context, and that the form of mathematics reflects the contexts of its development.
Example: "His contextualism of the exact sciences meant he studied how the concept of proof changed from Euclid to Hilbert to computer-assisted proofs—not as decline or progress, but as adaptation to different contexts and purposes."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
Get the Contextualism of the Exact Sciences mug.A philosophical framework holding that formal systems—logic, mathematics, computer science, information theory—are context-dependent in their meaning and application. What a formal system means depends on the context of its interpretation; what counts as a valid derivation depends on the context of its rules; what a formalism is useful for depends on the context of its application. Contextualism in the formal sciences opposes the idea that formal systems have meaning independent of their use. It insists that formalisms are tools whose significance emerges in context.
Example: "His contextualism of the formal sciences meant he rejected the idea that formal logic alone determines meaning. The same logical formula means different things in a programming language, a philosophical argument, and a legal document—context determines interpretation."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
Get the Contextualism of the Formal Sciences mug.When someone is texting you several times in a row and you are not replying; usually for several days in a row.
A mix of the words "non-consensual" and "text" as they are texting you repeatedly without your consent.
A mix of the words "non-consensual" and "text" as they are texting you repeatedly without your consent.
"Dude this chick has been texting me for days and I haven't replied once. It's obviously non-contextual but she isn't catching on."
"This guy got my number on Facebook and has been texting me ever since, I haven't replied so it's completely non-contextual."
"This guy got my number on Facebook and has been texting me ever since, I haven't replied so it's completely non-contextual."
by bucsfan846 September 11, 2011
Get the Non-Contextual mug.The application of contextualism to scientific knowledge—the view that scientific claims are always context-dependent, that what counts as a good experiment, a valid result, a sound theory varies with scientific context. Scientific Contextualism doesn't deny that science produces reliable knowledge; it just insists that this knowledge is always knowledge-for-a-particular-purpose, knowledge-under-particular-conditions, knowledge-within-a-particular-framework. Different scientific contexts produce different knowledge; none produces knowledge for all contexts. Scientific Contextualism is the philosophy of scientific pluralism, of the recognition that science is not one thing but many, each valid in its context.
Example: "He'd thought science was universal—same methods, same standards, same truths everywhere. Scientific Contextualism showed him otherwise: what counted as good evidence in physics didn't work in ecology; what was valid in the lab failed in the field. Science wasn't one thing; it was many, each valid in its context. He stopped looking for universal method and started learning local contexts."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
Get the Scientific Contextualism mug.The application of contextualism to epistemology—the view that knowledge attributions are context-dependent, that what counts as knowing varies with the standards of the context. Epistemological Contextualism argues that "knows" is a context-sensitive term: in a low-stakes context, you might know; in a high-stakes context, you might not. The same evidence, the same belief, the same person—different contexts, different knowledge claims. This doesn't make knowledge arbitrary; it makes knowledge sensitive to what's at stake, to what counts as good enough. Epistemological Contextualism is the philosophy of pragmatic epistemology, of the recognition that knowledge is always knowledge-for-some-purpose.
Example: "She knew her car was in the parking lot—until she needed it for a medical emergency. Suddenly, her knowledge seemed less certain. Epistemological Contextualism explained why: what counts as 'knowing' depends on what's at stake. Low stakes, she knew; high stakes, she needed more. Knowledge wasn't fixed; it was contextual. She started paying attention to what was at stake in every claim."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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