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Factual Perspectivism

A philosophical framework holding that facts are always from a perspective—that what we take as facts depends on the theoretical frameworks, conceptual commitments, and standpoints from which we approach the world. Factual perspectivism rejects the idea of perspective-free facts. A fact about a forest from a logger's perspective differs from a conservation biologist's perspective; a fact about a historical event from the victor's perspective differs from the vanquished's. Perspectivism doesn't make facts subjective; it recognizes that each perspective reveals genuine aspects of reality, and that no perspective captures the whole. It demands that we be explicit about the perspectives from which we claim facts and recognize that factuality is always factuality-from-a-perspective.
Example: "His factual perspectivism meant he could hold that both the colonial account and the indigenous account were factual—not because truth was relative, but because each perspective revealed facts the other missed, and both were needed to approach the fullness of history."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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