The ultimate model, adding the final dimensions of scope, certainty, and the epistemic subject. Building on the 12 Axes, we add: Axis 13: Defeasible-Indefeasible (knowledge can be overturned vs. immune to revision). Axis 14: Absolute-Relative (knowledge holds for all vs. relative to framework). Axis 15: Human-Transhuman (knowledge accessible to humans vs. beyond human capacity). Axis 16: Finite-Infinite (knowledge is bounded vs. potentially infinite). These sixteen axes generate 65,536 potential positions—enough to capture every epistemological theory, every conception of knowledge, every debate about what it means to know. The 16 Axes of the Knowledge Spectrum reveal that knowledge is not a simple concept but a multidimensional space of possibilities. The 16 Axes don't tell you which conception of knowledge is correct—they give you a language for understanding what any knowledge claim involves, what it assumes, and how it relates to other kinds of knowing. They are the map of the space of human understanding—the periodic table of epistemology itself.
The 16 Axes of the Knowledge Spectrum "You want to know what knowledge is. The 16 Axes answer: it depends. For a scientist, knowledge is a posteriori, propositional, communal, explicit, fallible, inferential, empirical, instrumental, justified, externalist, social, particular, defeasible, relative, human, finite. For a mathematician, it's a priori, propositional, personal, explicit, certain, inferential, conceptual, intrinsic, justified, internalist, individualist, universal, indefeasible, absolute, human, infinite. For a mystic, it's experiential, procedural/tacit, personal, tacit, certain (to them), direct, both, intrinsic, justified by experience, externalist (experience is reliable), individualist, particular, defeasible (to others), relative, human, finite. Same word, sixteen axes of difference. The axes don't define knowledge—they give you the language to ask what anyone means by it. And that's the most profound knowledge of all."
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
Get the The 16 Axes of the Knowledge Spectrum mug.A framework for evaluating evidence along eight key dimensions, providing a comprehensive map of where any piece of evidence falls. The 8 axes are: 1) Strength (how powerfully the evidence supports the claim), 2) Reliability (how trustworthy the source/method is), 3) Relevance (how directly the evidence addresses the claim), 4) Independence (how free the evidence is from conflict of interest), 5) Replicability (how consistently the finding can be reproduced), 6) Sample/Population Fit (how well the sample represents the population of interest), 7) Methodological Rigor (how well the study was designed and executed), and 8) Consilience (how well the evidence coheres with other established knowledge). These axes allow for nuanced evaluation rather than binary judgments.
The 8 Axes of the Evidence Spectrum Example: "They stopped arguing about whether the study was 'evidence' and started mapping it on the 8 axes. Strength: moderate. Reliability: high. Relevance: low (different population). Independence: questionable (industry funded). The axes showed where the evidence was strong and where it was weak—and why they disagreed about what it meant."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
Get the The 8 Axes of the Evidence Spectrum mug.An expanded framework for even more nuanced evaluation, adding eight dimensions to the original eight. The additional axes include: 9) Temporal Relevance (how current the evidence is), 10) Ecological Validity (how well the evidence reflects real-world conditions), 11) Mechanistic Understanding (whether we know why the evidence works), 12) Alternative Explanations (how thoroughly competing explanations have been ruled out), 13) Effect Size (how large the observed effect is, not just whether it's statistically significant), 14) Precision (how narrow the confidence intervals are), 15) Generalizability (how well the findings apply across contexts), and 16) Transparency (how fully the methods and data are available for scrutiny). The 16 axes provide a nearly complete picture of evidential quality, useful for high-stakes decisions where nuance matters.
The 16 Axes of the Evidence Spectrum *Example: "The policy debate was high-stakes, so they used all 16 axes. The evidence was strong on reliability and rigor, weak on ecological validity and generalizability. The 16 axes showed exactly where the uncertainty lay—not in whether the evidence existed, but in how well it applied. The policy was informed, not determined, by evidence—which is how it should be."*
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
Get the The 16 Axes of the Evidence Spectrum mug.A framework for evaluating bullshit along eight key dimensions. The 8 axes are: 1) Truth-Indifference (how little the speaker cares about truth), 2) Evidence-Deficit (how unsupported the claim is), 3) Plausibility (how believable the claim is on its face), 4) Motivation (what the speaker gains from the bullshit), 5) Harm Potential (how much damage the bullshit can cause), 6) Virality (how likely it is to spread), 7) Resistance to Correction (how hard it is to debunk), and 8) Systemicity (whether it's isolated bullshit or part of a larger bullshit system). These axes allow for nuanced evaluation of bullshit, distinguishing between different types and degrees.
The 8 Axes of the Bullshit Spectrum *Example: "They stopped just calling things 'bullshit' and started mapping them on the 8 axes. The advertising claim was high on truth-indifference, low on harm potential. The conspiracy theory was high on everything—truth-indifference, harm, virality, resistance. The axes showed why one was annoying and the other dangerous—and why responding required different strategies."*
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
Get the The 8 Axes of the Bullshit Spectrum mug.An expanded framework adding eight dimensions for even more nuanced bullshit evaluation. The additional axes include: 9) Intentionality (whether the bullshit is deliberate or the speaker is self-deceived), 10) Audience (who the bullshit targets), 11) Cultural Resonance (how well it fits existing beliefs), 12) Emotional Appeal (how much it leverages emotion), 13) Identity Loading (how tied it is to group identity), 14) Institutional Embeddedness (whether it's backed by institutions), 15) Historical Persistence (how long it's been around), and 16) Refutability (whether it can be effectively countered). The 16 axes provide a comprehensive bullshit analysis toolkit.
The 16 Axes of the Bullshit Spectrum *Example: "The conspiracy theory was off the charts on most axes—high truth-indifference, high harm, high virality, high identity loading. But on intentionality, it was mixed: some promoters knew it was bullshit; some believed it. The 16 axes showed the complexity: different strategies needed for different bullshitters. The theory wasn't just bullshit; it was a system."*
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
Get the The 16 Axes of the Bullshit Spectrum mug.A framework for evaluating pseudophilosophy along eight key dimensions. The 8 axes are: 1) Argumentative Rigor (how well claims are supported), 2) Conceptual Clarity (how clear the concepts are), 3) Engagement with Tradition (how well it engages existing philosophy), 4) Originality (whether it offers something new or just rehashes), 5) Falsifiability (whether claims could be shown wrong), 6) Practical Implications (what follows from the philosophy), 7) Internal Consistency (whether it contradicts itself), and 8) Cultural Impact (how it functions in culture). These axes allow for distinguishing between different types of pseudophilosophy.
The 8 Axes of the Pseudophilosophy Spectrum *Example: "The self-help guru's 'philosophy' scored low on argumentative rigor and conceptual clarity, medium on cultural impact, high on practical implications. The 8 axes showed why it was popular (practical, impactful) and why it wasn't philosophy (no rigor, no clarity). The spectrum explained both its appeal and its emptiness."*
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
Get the The 8 Axes of the Pseudophilosophy Spectrum mug.An expanded framework adding eight dimensions for more nuanced pseudophilosophy evaluation. The additional axes include: 9) Depth (whether it engages deep questions or skims surfaces), 10) Honesty (whether it acknowledges its limits), 11) Originality vs. Pastiche (whether it's genuinely new or just repackaged), 12) Systematicity (whether it forms a coherent system), 13) Explanatory Power (what it explains), 14) Reflexivity (whether it applies to itself), 15) Accessibility vs. Obfuscation (whether difficulty serves substance or掩饰), and 16) Longevity (whether it lasts or fades). The 16 axes provide comprehensive pseudophilosophy analysis.
The 16 Axes of the Pseudophilosophy Spectrum Example: "The text was dense, difficult, and initially impressive. The 16 axes revealed why: high on obfuscation, low on clarity; high on systematicity, low on explanatory power. It was designed to sound profound, not to be profound. The axes didn't just dismiss it; they showed how it worked."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
Get the The 16 Axes of the Pseudophilosophy Spectrum mug.