Difference between revisions of "Philosophy"
(Created page with "Philosophy is the study of fundamental questions. Questions in philosophy tend to be ''a priori'', but what is and isn't ''a priori'' changes over time.") |
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− | Philosophy is the study of fundamental questions. Questions in philosophy tend to be ''a priori'', but what is and isn't ''a priori'' changes over time. | + | Philosophy is the study of fundamental questions. Or is it...? Other definitions include "once, everything was philosphical; gradually, things got spun off into their own fields (e.g., math, logic, biology). Philosophy got left behind."; philosophy is thinking; or philosophy is the study of truth. (Other definitions are more easily applied to specific fields - for instance, "ethics is the study of what you should do.") Questions in philosophy tend to be ''a priori'', but what is and isn't ''a priori'' changes over time. |
+ | Many philosophers were also mathematicians, scientists, or other such things; for example, Pythagoras. |
Latest revision as of 14:51, 27 June 2022
Philosophy is the study of fundamental questions. Or is it...? Other definitions include "once, everything was philosphical; gradually, things got spun off into their own fields (e.g., math, logic, biology). Philosophy got left behind."; philosophy is thinking; or philosophy is the study of truth. (Other definitions are more easily applied to specific fields - for instance, "ethics is the study of what you should do.") Questions in philosophy tend to be a priori, but what is and isn't a priori changes over time. Many philosophers were also mathematicians, scientists, or other such things; for example, Pythagoras.