The weak version of Cognitive Realism. It proposes that our cognitive apparatus (senses, memory, language) doesn't lock us into one reality, but makes us relatively biased toward certain perceptions and interpretations. While our biology shapes and skews our view, there's still room for learning, different perspectives, and updating our mental models. It's the idea that we're wearing prescription lenses that distort, not blackout curtains that completely obscure.
Example: "Arguing about politics with my family showed Cognitive Relativism. We all watched the same debate, but our cognitive filters—shaped by different news sources, life experiences, and emotional triggers—highlighted different moments as 'key.' My reality of the event was relative to my cognitive setup, but by comparing notes, I could vaguely approximate what the 'neutral' feed might have been."
by Abzunammu February 2, 2026
Get the Cognitive Relativism mug.A weak form of cognitive realism, acknowledging that cognition shapes perception but stopping short of strong conclusions about the implications. Cognitive Relativism accepts that different cognitive systems might produce different experiences of reality—that a bee sees ultraviolet, a bat echolocates, a human perceives color—but doesn't draw strong epistemological conclusions from this diversity. It's cognitive realism for those who want to acknowledge the role of the brain without embracing the full implications of cognitive mediation. Cognitive Relativism is the position that "we all see things differently because of how our brains work" without pushing further into questions about truth, knowledge, or reality.
Example: "He acknowledged that different species perceived the world differently, but he stopped there. Cognitive Relativism let him note the diversity without questioning his own access to reality. Bees saw ultraviolet, but he saw things as they really were. The relativism was for others, not for him."
by Abzugal March 9, 2026
Get the Cognitive Relativism mug.The view that all knowledge, concepts, and truths are constructed by the mind and are relative to the individual's or culture's perspective, framework, or conceptual scheme. There is no neutral, framework-independent way to check if our concepts "match" reality; we're always interpreting through a lens. Different frameworks create different, equally valid, cognitive realities.
Example: The concept of "justice." Cognitive relativism would argue there's no universal, mind-independent essence of justice. One culture's justice (restorative, community-based) is a fundamentally different cognitive construction than another's (retributive, individual-based). Neither is more "real"; they are products of different historical and social frameworks. Two people witnessing the same event (e.g., a political protest) will cognitively construct different events based on their pre-existing schemas.
by Abzugal January 24, 2026
Get the Cognitive Relativism mug.The theory or metaphor that the process of thinking itself is not absolute, but is shaped and distorted by the thinker's frame of reference—their speed, gravitational environment, or more abstractly, their psychological and cultural context. In a literal sci-fi sense, it could mean a brain's information processing speed is subject to time dilation. Philosophically, it suggests that concepts, logic, and even the experience of reasoning are not universal constants but are relative to the cognitive "velocity" and "mass" of the mind's substrate. A super-intelligent alien might not just think faster, but its reasoning might follow non-human, relativistic laws.
Example: "After months on the interstellar ship, my thinking felt off. That's relativistic cognition—my brain was processing at Earth-normal speed, but the ship's AI, running in a time-dilated compartment, had already considered a billion outcomes for every one of my thoughts. Arguing with it was like debating a glacier with a supercomputer."
by Dumu The Void January 30, 2026
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