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A branch of philosophy that examines the nature, justification, and implications of materialistic orthodoxy—asking philosophical questions about the foundations of materialism itself. The philosophy of materialistic orthodoxy investigates the epistemological status of materialist commitments: Is materialism proven, or is it a working assumption? How do we know that matter is all that exists? What counts as evidence for materialism, and what would count against it? It also examines the conceptual coherence of materialism: Can materialism account for consciousness, meaning, and value? Does materialism's own claims about knowledge presuppose something beyond matter? The philosophy of materialistic orthodoxy is essential for materialism to be self-aware rather than merely assumed, for materialists to understand the philosophical foundations of their worldview rather than treating them as self-evident.
Example: "His philosophy of materialistic orthodoxy work asked whether materialism can account for its own existence—if thoughts are just brain states, then why think any are true rather than just caused? Materialism's claim to truth requires something materialism can't provide."
by Abzugal March 16, 2026
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