noun
- The philosophical view that the meaning, truth, or interpretation of something depends on its context rather than on fixed, universal principles.
- In epistemology and semantics, the theory that knowledge claims, utterances, or propositions are true or false only relative to a specific context of use.
Usage: philosophy; linguistics
Usage: formal philosophy
Examples
- Contextualism in linguistics explains why the word 'here' means different places depending on where it is spoken.
- Some philosophers defend contextualism about knowledge to account for how standards of evidence shift in different situations.
- The debate between contextualism and invariantism concerns whether truth-conditions change with conversational context.
- Contextualism suggests that calling someone 'tall' is not absolutely true or false, but depends on the relevant comparison group.
- In legal interpretation, contextualism emphasizes understanding laws in light of their historical and social background.
- Critics of contextualism worry that it makes meaning too variable and subjective.