Epistemologies

Epistemologies are the underlying assumptions about knowledge, reality, meaning, people, problems and change.

In SystemicWiki, epistemology is the foundation layer because it sits underneath every school, pathway, concept, method and technique. It helps readers understand not only what a model does, but what kind of knowledge the model is built upon.

Expanded definition

An epistemology is a way of knowing. In systemic practice, epistemologies shape how practitioners understand human experience, relational difficulty, therapeutic change and their own position in the work.

Different epistemologies lead to different kinds of questions. A medical-model epistemology may ask what symptoms are present. A systemic epistemology may ask what relationships, contexts and patterns are involved. A narrative epistemology may ask how stories and meanings are shaping identity. An anti-oppressive epistemology may ask whose knowledge is being privileged and how power is operating.

Working idea: systemic practice is not only a collection of interventions. It is a set of ways of understanding knowledge, meaning, relationship and change.

Why this level matters

Epistemology matters because every clinical formulation already contains assumptions. If those assumptions are invisible, practitioners may unintentionally locate problems inside individuals, privilege professional knowledge over lived experience, ignore culture and power, or use techniques without understanding the thinking behind them.

  • It clarifies why different systemic models ask different questions.
  • It helps practitioners choose concepts, methods and techniques more thoughtfully.
  • It supports reflexivity about power, culture, professional authority and context.
  • It helps readers hold multiple perspectives without collapsing everything into one explanation.

Epistemology groups

Foundational systemic epistemologies

Systems, feedback, circular causality, communication, context and change.

Meaning, language and social reality

Meaning, identity, language, discourse, dialogue, interpretation and co-created reality.

Model-specific practice epistemologies

The assumptions underneath specific systemic schools, models and practice traditions.

Power, culture and justice

Culturally responsive, anti-oppressive, intersectional, feminist, decolonial and justice-oriented practice.

Developmental and clinical epistemologies

Developmental, trauma-informed, neurodiversity-informed, embodied and phenomenological understandings.

Medical and modernist comparison

Comparison with diagnostic, positivist, medical and modernist ways of knowing.

How to use this section

Use this section as the foundation layer of SystemicWiki. Start with the index to see the organised list, then use the map to understand how epistemologies connect to pathways, schools, concepts, methods and techniques.

For example, the Narrative pathway is shaped by social constructionism, poststructuralist epistemology, narrative epistemology, relational epistemology and anti-oppressive epistemology. The Milan pathway is shaped by cybernetic epistemology, second-order epistemology, Milan epistemology, communication epistemology and reflexive epistemology.

Key texts / references

  • Bateson, G. (1972). Steps to an Ecology of Mind.
  • Gergen, K. J. (1999). An Invitation to Social Construction.
  • White, M., & Epston, D. (1990). Narrative Means to Therapeutic Ends.
  • Foucault, M. (1980). Power/Knowledge.
  • Anderson, H. (1997). Conversation, Language, and Possibilities.