Multiperspectivism
A comprehensive philosophical framework holding that reality, knowledge, and value are inherently multiple—that they can and should be understood through multiple legitimate perspectives, none of which exhausts the whole, and that genuine understanding requires engaging with this multiplicity. Multiperspectivism goes beyond acknowledging that people have different perspectives to insist that the world itself sustains multiple valid perspectives—that reality is rich enough to be seen in many ways, that different questions reveal different aspects, that different frameworks illuminate different dimensions. This framework draws on examples across domains: light as wave and particle; mind as brain and experience; society as structure and interaction; truth as correspondence and coherence and pragmatics. Multiperspectivism doesn't claim that all perspectives are equally valid—some are distorted, some are partial, some are wrong. But it insists that validity is plural, that the goal is not to find the one true perspective but to understand how perspectives relate, complement, and sometimes correct each other. In a multiperspectivist view, wisdom is the capacity to see through many eyes.
Example: "His multiperspectivism meant he could appreciate both scientific and artistic understandings of a landscape—not as competitors for truth, but as different ways of seeing, each revealing something the other couldn't. The mountain was both geology and meaning, and you needed both perspectives to really see it."
Multiperspectivism by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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