The application of contextualism to objectivity—the view that objectivity is context-dependent, that what counts as objective varies with the standards of the context. Objectivity Contextualism argues that there is no single standard of objectivity that applies everywhere; instead, objectivity is achieved by meeting the standards of one's context. A courtroom has different objectivity standards than a laboratory; a newsroom has different standards than a classroom. This doesn't make objectivity meaningless; it makes it contextual. Objectivity Contextualism is the philosophy of situated objectivity, of the recognition that objectivity is always objectivity-for-some-purpose, objectivity-under-some-conditions.
Example: "She'd thought objectivity was the same everywhere—the view from nowhere. Objectivity Contextualism showed her otherwise: what counted as objective in science didn't work in law; what worked in journalism didn't work in history. Objectivity wasn't one thing; it was many, each appropriate to its context. She stopped looking for the one true objectivity and started learning the standards of each context."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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