The view that complex problems require multiple logical perspectives held in tension, because no single logic captures everything. A legal case might need formal logic for statutes, narrative logic for witness testimony, and ethical logic for consequences. Logical Multiperspectivism doesn't seek the one true logic for a problem—it moves between logical frameworks, using each for what it reveals, letting them check and complicate each other. It's logic that has learned that one lens is never enough.
"This ethical dilemma can't be solved with just utilitarian logic. Logical Multiperspectivism says: add deontological logic, care ethics logic, virtue logic. Each gives a different answer; none is final. The truth is in the tension between them, not in picking one. Hold multiple logics or hold wrong answers."
by Dumu The Void February 24, 2026
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