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Field Epistemology

The rules for what counts as valid knowledge within a specific, constructed domain of control. It establishes that only certain types of evidence (usually quantitative, empirical) and certain knowers (credentialed experts) can produce truth about the field. It actively excludes other ways of knowing, like personal testimony, tradition, or philosophical reasoning.
Field Epistemology Example: In corporate "People Analytics," a field epistemology is established where the only valid knowledge about employee morale comes from engagement survey metrics and productivity software data. A manager's personal observation or an employee's direct complaint is dismissed as "anecdotal" and therefore epistemologically invalid.
by Dumuabzu February 8, 2026
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