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What is Philosophy?

Philosophy is the systematic inquiry into existence, knowledge, value, reason, mind, and language. It doesn’t hand you answers — it sharpens your questions. And better questions shape all thinking, all culture, all civilization.
Are you aware that every decision you make rests on philosophical assumptions? Philosophy makes those assumptions visible — so you can examine them.
This category covers 45 core philosophical concepts, organized into six groups:
  • Existence & Meaning: why we live and how to face life
  • Ethics: what is right and how we should act
  • Epistemology: how we know and where knowledge comes from
  • Metaphysics: the fundamental nature of reality
  • Modern Philosophy: major intellectual currents since the 20th century
  • Eastern Philosophy: foundational wisdom from East Asian traditions

Existence & Meaning

Existentialism

Existence precedes essence — humans define their own meaning

Nihilism

Life has no inherent meaning — understand it to move beyond it

Absurdism

The human craving for meaning vs. the universe’s silence

Stoicism

Focus on what is within your control; accept what is not

Epicureanism

The highest good is tranquil pleasure and freedom from fear

Eudaimonia

Aristotle’s conception of human flourishing — the highest good

Amor Fati

Love your fate — embrace everything that happens as necessary and good

Memento Mori

Remember you will die — use it to cultivate urgency and gratitude

Eternal Recurrence

If you had to live this life infinitely, would you choose it?

Will to Power

Nietzsche: the fundamental human drive is expansion and self-overcoming

Übermensch

The individual who transcends conventional morality and creates their own values

Ethics

Utilitarianism

Maximize aggregate well-being — outcomes determine the morality of actions

Deontological Ethics

Act according to universal moral rules, regardless of consequences

Virtue Ethics

Character and virtue — not rules or outcomes — are the foundation of morality

Categorical Imperative

Act only according to principles you could will to be universal laws

Social Contract

Individuals surrender some freedoms in exchange for social order and protection

Veil of Ignorance

Design just institutions without knowing your own position in them

Trolley Problem

Would you divert a trolley to kill one person instead of five?

Pascal's Wager

Believing in God is the rational bet, given the potential infinite upside

Problem of Evil

If God is omnipotent and good, why does evil exist?

The Golden Mean

Virtue lies in the mean between excess and deficiency

Epistemology

Empiricism

All knowledge derives from sensory experience

Rationalism

Reason, not experience, is the primary source of knowledge

Pragmatism

The truth of an idea is measured by its practical consequences

Cogito Ergo Sum

Descartes: the only certainty is the fact that I am thinking

Tabula Rasa

The mind begins as a blank slate, entirely shaped by experience

Allegory of the Cave

Most people see only shadows of reality; truth requires leaving the cave

Phenomenology

Study the structure of consciousness from the first-person perspective

Solipsism

Only one’s own mind is certain to exist

Metaphysics

Determinism

Every event is determined by prior causes and natural laws

Free Will

Can humans make choices uncaused by prior events?

Compatibilism

Free will and determinism can coexist

Dualism

Mind and body are fundamentally different kinds of substance

Monism

All of reality is ultimately one kind of thing

Dialectical Materialism

Material conditions and contradictions drive historical and social change

Hegelian Dialectic

Thesis → Antithesis → Synthesis: progress through contradiction

Modern Philosophy

Postmodernism

Distrust grand narratives; reality is socially constructed

Relativism

Truth and morality are not absolute — they vary by culture and individual

Objectivism

Reality is independent of consciousness; rational self-interest is the highest moral aim

Simulacra and Simulation

Signs have replaced reality; the map has replaced the territory (Baudrillard)

Panopticon

How pervasive surveillance shapes behavior even without active watching (Foucault/Bentham)

Eastern Philosophy

Tao

The fundamental, unnameable force that pervades and underlies all things

Wu Wei

Non-action — effortless action aligned with the natural flow of things

Yin and Yang

Opposites are complementary and interdependent, forming dynamic wholeness

Occam's Razor (Philosophical)

Entities should not be multiplied beyond necessity