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Logical Contextualism

The position that the validity of logical inferences depends on context—that what counts as a good argument shifts with domain, purpose, and situation. In mathematics, classical logic rules. In legal reasoning, different standards apply. In everyday conversation, informal logic governs. Logical Contextualism doesn't reject logic—it recognizes that logic is always logic-in-context, and that exporting logical rules across contexts without adjustment produces error. The context isn't external to logic—it's part of what logic means.
"That argument works in a philosophy paper but fails in a marriage counseling session. Logical Contextualism says: different contexts, different logical standards. You're using the right logic for the wrong context, which is just another way of being wrong. Read the room before you syllogize."
by Dumu The Void February 24, 2026
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