Theory of Contextualist Epistemology
A framework for understanding knowledge as fundamentally context-dependent—what counts as knowledge, how much justification is needed, and what standards apply all shift with context. Contextualist Epistemology recognizes that knowledge isn't absolute; it's always knowledge-for-a-purpose, knowledge-in-a-situation. In everyday contexts, "I know the car is parked outside" requires a glance. In a courtroom, it requires more. In a philosophy seminar, it requires Cartesian certainty. The knowledge is the same; the standards shift with context. Contextualist Epistemology studies these shifts—how context shapes knowing, and what that means for knowledge claims.
Theory of Contextualist Epistemology "You say you know he's lying. Contextualist Epistemology asks: know for what purpose? Casual conversation? Courtroom? Relationship? The standards differ with context. Knowledge isn't absolute; it's contextual. What counts in one situation doesn't in another. Contextualism doesn't relativize truth; it relativizes standards—and that's a crucial difference."
Theory of Contextualist Epistemology by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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