Visual Epistemology
Also known as: Sighted Epistemology
Ways of knowing and understanding the world that are dependent on visual perception. Visual epistemology treats sight as the primary and most reliable sense for gathering information, often positioning visual evidence as more trustworthy or complete than information obtained through other senses. In technology design, visual epistemology influences how systems present information and verify accuracy, frequently disadvantaging blind users whose knowledge is constructed through non-visual means.
Category: disability studies · accessibility principles
Related: Blind Epistemology · Sighted Bias · Epistemic Contingency