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Ethics
The study of morality and the difference between right and wrong.
Epistemology
The study and theory of knowledge.
Metaphysics
The purpose of why things exist; addressing questions about existence and fulfillment.
Pre-Socratics
The very first thinkers in Western philosophy, active in ancient Greece during the 6th and 5th centuries BCE.
Thales
Proposed that water was the fundamental substance for all life.
Anaximander
First to create a map.
Pythagoras
Known as the father of mathematics.
Heraclitus
Argued that the fundamental substance was fire and believed everything changes.
Parmenides
Believed that everything does not change.
The Physical Realm
The world we see and touch, characterized as temporary, constantly changing, and flawed.
The Realm of Forms
An invisible, unchanging world where the perfect, ideal versions of everything exist.
Head/Reasoning
The seat of reason, logic, and intellect, seeking ultimate truth and distinction between reality and illusion.
The Chest/Spirit
The seat of emotion, courage, pride, and willpower; drives one to overcome challenges.
The Abdomen/Appetite
The seat of basic physical desires and instincts, driven by pleasure without logical restraint.
Hylomorphism
The theory that everything is a mix of matter and form.
Material cause
The elements out of which an object is created.
Efficient cause
The means by which an object is created.
Formal cause
The expression of what an object is.
Final cause
The end for which an object is intended.
Rationalism
The belief that knowledge comes from intellect, logic, and innate ideas.
Empiricism
The belief that all knowledge comes from sensory experience.
Deductive Reasoning
A reasoning method that starts with a general statement and narrows it down to a specific conclusion.
Inductive Reasoning
A reasoning method that starts with specific observations and broadens them to create a general theory.
Ad Hominem
Attacking the opponent's character instead of their argument.
Straw Man
Misrepresenting an opponent's argument to make it easier to attack.
Bandwagon Appeal (Ad Populum)
Arguing that something is true simply because a large number of people believe it.
Non Sequitur
A conclusion that does not logically follow from the premises.
Groupthink
When a group makes poor decisions because members prioritize harmony over truth.
Consequentialism
The ethical theory that actions are judged by their outcomes.
Non-Consequentialism (Deontology)
The ethical theory that some actions are inherently right or wrong, regardless of outcomes.
Carl Rogers' Fully Functioning Person
Someone who is in touch with their true desires and actively works to reach their full potential.