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philosophical powers

slang term used to describe those who are hard thinkers and think for the benefit of people and themselves (ie : help them) which is the complete opposite of "sophisticated powers"
"he used his philosophical powers to free his colleagues from their admin"
by vagabond loves dictionary March 28, 2024
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Philosophist

A philosopher of sorts, a kind of philosopher, somewhat of a philosopher, but not quite fully qualified to be one.
You’ll find plenty of philosophists on street corners, sitting on the pavement discussing politics and religion with full authority!
by drskeptic November 9, 2024
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Philosophifical

(adj.) A word used to describe an object or situation that leaves you astounded, or speechless; crazy
*Someone says something outrageous*
Person: "Yo, that's philosophifical"
by William Dingleheimer December 10, 2024
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Philosophical Sandboxism

The application of sandbox thinking to philosophy itself: recognizing that philosophical systems are sandcastles built within the sandbox of human language, logic, and experience. Each system—Platonism, empiricism, existentialism—is a construction, beautiful and useful, but none escapes the sandbox. Philosophical Sandboxism doesn't despair at this but celebrates it: the sandbox is big enough for infinite castles, and the play is in the building, not in finding the One True Castle that will last forever.
Philosophical Sandboxism "You're still looking for the one true philosophy that explains everything? Philosophical Sandboxism says: look around—we're all building castles in the same sandbox. Yours is pretty, mine is functional, theirs is weird. None will survive the tide. Build anyway, and admire the neighbors' work."
by Dumu The Void February 24, 2026
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Philosophical Biases

Systematic distortions in how we do philosophy—the assumptions we bring to philosophical questions that shape what answers seem plausible. Philosophical Biases include: realism bias (assuming our concepts map reality); rationalism bias (trusting reason over experience); individualism bias (focusing on individual knowers); presentism bias (judging past philosophers by current standards); technical bias (valuing technical sophistication over wisdom). Philosophical biases are the invisible lenses through which we see philosophical problems—and they determine what we see and what we miss.
Philosophical Biases "He dismissed ancient philosophy as 'primitive.' That's Philosophical Bias—presentism, judging the past by the present. The Greeks weren't primitive; they were asking different questions with different tools. Philosophical bias makes us miss the wisdom in other times and places because we're too busy ranking them by our standards. Philosophy without bias would be conversation across time, not judgment of it."
by Dumu The Void March 1, 2026
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Philosophical Metabiases

Second-order biases in how we do philosophy—the assumptions we bring to philosophical inquiry that shape what questions seem important and what answers seem plausible. Philosophical Metabiases include: realism bias (assuming concepts map reality); rationalism bias (trusting reason over experience); individualism bias (focusing on individual knowers); presentism bias (judging past philosophers by current standards); technical bias (valuing technical sophistication over wisdom). Philosophical Metabiases are the invisible lenses through which philosophers see—and they determine what philosophers see and what they miss.
Philosophical Metabiases "He dismissed ancient philosophy as 'primitive.' That's Philosophical Metabias—presentism, judging the past by the present. The Greeks weren't primitive; they were asking different questions with different tools. The metabias is thinking your standards are universal, not historical. Philosophy without metabias would be conversation across time, not judgment of it."
by Dumu The Void March 1, 2026
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Philosophical Postmodernism

The core philosophical tradition of postmodernism, encompassing the work of thinkers like Derrida, Foucault, Lyotard, and Deleuze. Philosophical Postmodernism is characterized by the critique of grand narratives, the deconstruction of binary oppositions, the emphasis on difference and multiplicity, and the recognition of the intimate connection between knowledge and power. It's not a single doctrine but a family of approaches, all sharing a suspicion of claims to universal truth and a commitment to exposing the contingency of what seems natural. Philosophical Postmodernism is the foundation on which all other postmodernisms are built—the source of the insights that have transformed every academic discipline.
Example: "He finally read the original texts—Derrida on deconstruction, Foucault on power, Lyotard on grand narratives. Philosophical Postmodernism wasn't what its critics said; it was richer, stranger, more challenging. He emerged changed, seeing contingency everywhere, certainty nowhere."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
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