Multicontextualism of the Social Sciences
A philosophical framework holding that the social sciences must contend with irreducible multiplicity of contexts—that social phenomena are shaped by overlapping, sometimes conflicting contexts that cannot be reduced to a single background. Multicontextualism goes beyond contextualism by insisting that contexts themselves are multiple and interact in complex ways. A community exists simultaneously in local, national, global, historical, economic, cultural, and digital contexts, each shaping the others. A social phenomenon cannot be understood by appealing to a single context; understanding requires mapping how contexts interrelate. This framework demands that social scientists develop methods capable of handling contextual complexity, recognizing that the search for single-context explanations often produces distortion rather than clarity.
Example: "His multicontextualism of the social sciences meant he studied the protest movement not just in its national political context, but also in its local community context, its digital media context, its generational context, and its historical context—all of which interacted to produce what the movement became."
Multicontextualism of the Social Sciences by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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