Definitions: Philosophy, Truth, Methods of Argument (Worth Repeating)


PHILOSOPHY
The search for internally consistent means of decidability within a domain or context.

TRUTH (PROPER)
The most parsimonious most universal method of decidability regardless of context.

SOME FORMS OF ARGUMENT

  • Analogy – a justification by shared constant relations.
  • Reason – a criticized and justified argument from experience.
  • Rational – an internally consistent, non contradictory argument from experience
  • Empirical – a correlative externally correspondent argument for the purpose of limiting human error bias and deceit.
  • Logical – an internally consistent, non contradictory, argument from set membership.
  • Analytic (Logical+Empirical) – an internally consistent, non contradictory, verbally parsimonious, argument from set membership incorporating the methods of the physical sciences.
  • Operational (Current Scientific) – an internally consistent, existentially possible, subjectively testable, causal, argument from possibility.
,

Leave a Reply