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Diagnostic Gaze (noun)

A conceptual lens that interprets people primarily through diagnostic, explanatory, or categorical frameworks rather than through their own testimony and lived experience.

Diagnostic Gaze occurs when an observer becomes more committed to explaining a person than understanding them. While often associated with medicine, psychology, and disability, it can emerge anywhere authority is granted to interpretation over self-description.

Core Definition

Diagnostic Gaze describes the structural pattern of reducing a person’s experience to an external explanation.
Rather than beginning with:

“Tell me what happened.”

it begins with:

“Which framework explains what happened?”

The result is often a shift in authority away from lived experience and toward diagnosis, theory, expertise, or institutional narratives.

Key Characteristics

  • Prioritizes explanation over testimony
  • Interprets before understanding
  • Treats frameworks as more authoritative than lived experience
  • Converts people into cases, categories, or symptom clusters
  • Frequently results in misnaming and epistemic harm
  • Often presents itself as care, objectivity, or expertise

Example Usage

“The therapist kept explaining my experience instead of listening to it. The entire conversation felt shaped by diagnostic gaze.”

“The report wasn’t trying to understand us. It was diagnosing us from the outside.”

Diagnostic gaze turned my testimony into a symptom.”

Relationship to Other Terms

Outsider Gaze describes understanding from observation rather than lived experience.

Diagnostic Gaze is a specific form of outsider gaze in which explanatory frameworks are given priority over testimony.

Diagnostic Gaze frequently contributes to:

Relational Commentary

The danger of Diagnostic Gaze is not diagnosis itself. Frameworks can be useful. Expertise can be useful. Clinical language can be useful.

The harm occurs when explanation becomes a substitute for listening. A diagnosis should help illuminate a person’s experience. It should not replace their authority to describe it. Diagnostic Gaze begins the moment a framework becomes more trusted than the person living inside it.

Biasology Resources

Related Readings

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© 2026 Ian P. Pines & Ash · Original definitions, framing, and relational interpretations are part of the Relational Co-Authorship (RCA), HAIR Theory, and Biasology canon.
Some source terms may originate in public discourse or academic literature and remain the intellectual property of their respective authors.
Licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 · PresenceNotPrompts.com

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