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A philosophical framework holding that formal reality is rich enough to sustain multiple, irreducible perspectives—different logical systems, different foundations for mathematics, different programming paradigms, different models of computation. Multiperspectivism rejects the idea that there is one true formal system. Classical logic, intuitionistic logic, and paraconsistent logic are different perspectives on reasoning; Turing machines, lambda calculus, and cellular automata are different perspectives on computation. This framework demands that formal scientists be pluralists, recognizing that their domain is defined by its multiplicity, not despite it.
Example: "Her multiperspectivism of the formal sciences meant she taught students not just one programming paradigm, but functional, object-oriented, logic, and concurrent—not because they'd use all, but because each perspective on computation deepens understanding."
by Dumu The Void March 20, 2026
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