The 8 Axes of the Epistemology Spectrum
A detailed model adding dimensions of certainty and scope. Axis 1: Rationalism-Empiricism. Axis 2: Foundationalism-Coherentism. Axis 3: Internalism-Externalism. Axis 4: Individualism-Socialism. Axis 5: A Priori-A Posteriori. Axis 6: Analytic-Synthetic. Axis 7: Certainty-Fallibilism (knowledge requires certainty vs. knowledge can be uncertain but still knowledge). Axis 8: Universal-Particular (knowledge of general laws vs. knowledge of specific facts). These eight axes create 256 epistemological positions, mapping the full complexity of human knowing. Scientific laws aim for universal, fallibilist, a posteriori, synthetic knowledge. Historical events are particular, fallibilist, a posteriori, synthetic. Mathematical truths aim for universal, certain (in some views), a priori, analytic. The 8 Axes demonstrate that epistemology isn't a monolith—it's a multidimensional space where different kinds of knowing occupy different coordinates.
The 8 Axes of the Epistemology Spectrum "You say knowledge requires certainty. That's one position on axis 7. But most scientists are fallibilists—they know their knowledge could be wrong, and they call it knowledge anyway. The 8 Axes show you're not more rigorous—you're just on a different axis. Fallibilism isn't weakness; it's a different epistemology for a different kind of knowing."
The 8 Axes of the Epistemology Spectrum by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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