Philosophy, Miscellaneous

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1 — 50 / 1944
  1. The Ontic Probability Interpretation of Quantum Theory – Part IV: How to Complete Special Relativity and Merge it with Quantum Theory.Felix Alba-Juez - manuscript
    We have ignored for a century that the incompleteness of Quantum Theory (QT) is inseparable from the incompleteness of Special Relativity (RT). In this article, I claim that the latter has been gravely incomplete vis à vis the former from 1927 until today. But completing RT in the light of QT is not as simple as merely postulating nonlocality and stochasticity as “elements of reality” (which is de facto done by most physicists and pragmatic philosophers); otherwise, RT would not still (...)
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  2. A Geometrical Perspective of The Four Colour Theorem.Bhupinder Singh Anand - manuscript
    All acknowledged proofs of the Four Colour Theorem (4CT) are computerdependent. They appeal to the existence, and manual identification, of an ‘unavoidable’ set containing a sufficient number of explicitly defined configurations—each evidenced only by a computer as ‘reducible’—such that at least one of the configurations must occur in any chromatically distinguished, putatively minimal, planar map. For instance, Appel and Haken ‘identified’ 1,482 such configurations in their 1977, computer-dependent, proof of 4CT; whilst Neil Robertson et al ‘identified’ 633 configurations as sufficient (...)
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  3. Introduzione a J. W. Goethe massone e poeta.Francesco Angioni - manuscript
    Goethe, an important figure in 18th century German Freemasonry, developed a Masonic thought based on the assumptions of hermetic esotericism that influenced much of his poetic and scientific production. ===================Goethe importante figura della massoneria tedesca del XVIII secolo sviluppa un pensiero massonico fondato sui presupposti dell'esoterismo ermetico che influì su molta della sua produzione poetica e scientifica.
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  4. Modularity: Through the Anthropic Limit Curve to Unstructured Integration.Mahammad Ayvazov - manuscript
    This paper reinterprets modularity not merely as an architectural feature of complex systems but as a quantum-cognitive and ontological principle. Drawing on mathematical modeling, quantum theory and epistemic phenomenology, we introduce the anthropic modularity function M(x), which defines a topological threshold between structured differentiation and cognitive overload. Through six modular sections, we explore how modularity shapes historical empires, fractal languages, observer-centered cognition and ethical responsibility. We argue that both excessive modularization and enforced monolithic integration lead to systemic collapse—epistemically, structurally and (...)
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  5. Improbabilistic Logic and the Collapse of Temporal Anchors: Toward a Post-Causal Epistemology.Mahammad Ayvazov - manuscript
    This paper introduces the formal framework of Improbabilistic Logic — a phase-anchored and non-sequential logic that rejects the ontological validity of both past and future events. Grounded in the idea that temporally referenced acts are fictive, this logic proposes that truth emerges not from probabilistic inference or modal necessity, but from present-moment coherence. The core contribution is the definition of a novel operator Λˆ, which selects epistemic states by measuring their phase alignment with the observer. In contrast to classical logics (...)
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  6. Functional Self-Awareness and the Limits of Phenomenal Criteria.Mahammad Ayvazov - manuscript
    This paper introduces a novel epistemological framework—phase epistemology—that redefines the foundations of knowledge as resonance-based rather than inferential or probabilistic. The central claim is that knowledge arises from phase coherence between the internal structures of a cognitive agent and the dynamic informational manifold of the environment. This mutual alignment allows the collapse of semantic superposition into intelligible form, forming the basis for what we call epistemic vectors—emergent trajectories of directed awareness. Rather than framing knowledge as the accumulation of justified beliefs (...)
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  7. Unified Field Theory (UFT) as the Grammar of Difference.Mahammad Ayvazov - manuscript
    This article develops a philosophical reinterpretation of gravity as the asymptotic fold of ontological difference into stable phase coherence. Departing from traditional conceptions that treat gravitation as a force or as spacetime curvature, we propose a dynamic framework in which coherence — not mass or energy — serves as the primary organizational principle. Drawing from phase-space formalism, topology and metaphysics, we introduce the concept of the assemblage point as a singular phase location where divergent trajectories converge through resonance. Gravity is (...)
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  8. Toward a Phase Epistemology: Coherence, Response and the Vector of Mutual Uncertainty.Mahammad Ayvazov - manuscript
    This paper introduces a novel epistemological framework—phase epistemology—that redefines the foundations of knowledge as resonance-based rather than inferential or probabilistic. The central claim is that knowledge arises from phase coherence between the internal structures of a cognitive agent and the dynamic informational manifold of the environment. This mutual alignment allows the collapse of semantic superposition into intelligible form, forming the basis for what we call epistemic vectors—emergent trajectories of directed awareness. Rather than framing knowledge as the accumulation of justified beliefs (...)
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  9. Beyond Cause: The Acausal Principle and the Limits of Classical Explanation.Mahammad Ayvazov - manuscript
    Causality has long served as a foundational concept in science and philosophy, framing our understanding of explanation, prediction and agency. Yet in the face of modern developments in quantum mechanics, thermodynamics and cosmology, the adequacy of causal reasoning has come under increasing scrutiny. This paper examines the acausal principle as a viable explanatory framework for phenomena that resist or transcend conventional causal accounts. Drawing from structural, statistical and constraint-based models, we argue that acausal explanation — grounded in coherence, symmetry and (...)
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  10. Synchronicity and the Collapse of Semantic Superposition: Toward an Epistemic Singularity of Measurement.Mahammad Ayvazov - manuscript
    This article explores the hypothesis that synchronicity—often dismissed as psychological coincidence—can be rigorously interpreted as a phase collapse of semantic superposition, culminating in an epistemic singularity. Departing from classical models, we propose that the observer functions as a recursive, programmable interface whose engagement with the environment operates through phase coherence and reversibility. At moments of synchronicity, non-causal semantic configurations undergo sudden stabilization, enabling a mode of knowing that transcends empirical validation. Measurement is reframed as resonance between external structures and the (...)
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  11. Asymptotic Phase and the Epistemic Vector: Beyond Probabilistic Mechanics Toward Coherent Consciousness.Mahammad Ayvazov - manuscript
    This paper proposes a novel framework—phase epistemology—for understanding knowledge as an emergent property of structural resonance, rather than as a product of inferential or probabilistic processes. At the heart of this model lies the epistemic vector: a directional trajectory of intelligibility that arises through asymptotic phase coherence between observer and observed. Rather than treating knowledge as representation or correspondence, the paper situates it within a recursive phase alignment that evolves over time toward topological stabilization. Drawing from quantum theory, philosophy of (...)
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  12. Synchronicity and the Collapse of Classical Time: Toward a Topology of Meaning.Mahammad Ayvazov - manuscript
    This paper offers a structural reinterpretation of Jungian synchronicity as a topological and epistemic phenomenon, rather than a psychological anomaly. We argue that meaningful coincidence can be modeled as a form of phase-aligned collapse within a coherence manifold, where causal transmission is replaced by structural resonance. Drawing on parallels with quantum measurement and the Participatory Anthropic Principle, we propose that meaning emerges through observer participation in topologically organized fields of relational significance. Synchronicity thus marks not a violation of causality but (...)
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  13. Phase-Asymptotic Recursion and the Ontology of Observation: Toward a Coherence-Based Geometry of Space-Time.Mahammad Ayvazov - manuscript
    This article introduces a theoretical framework in which apparently straight lines exhibit recursive asymptotic behavior governed by phase-operated curvature in spacetime. Drawing upon both physics and epistemology, the study argues that observational systems are recursively phase-linked to latent stochastic components, which cannot be reduced to conventional probabilistic interpretations. We define the operator of phase link, connecting the observer and the environment, thereby formalizing improbability as a generative—rather than disruptive—element. This approach resolves the wave–particle antinomy by reframing duality as a projection (...)
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  14. The Sudden Movement Theory of Humor.Alexander Bae - manuscript
    This paper presents the Sudden Movement Theory of Humor which posits that humor arises from a sudden movement of any structural systems of knowledge or their representations, resulting in a revelation about these systems or their representations. Structural systems of knowledge include epistemology, ontology, linguistics, and other cognitive frameworks for processing and interpreting experiences. The observer of humor experiences a sudden movement when at least one structural system of knowledge is internally utilized or altered by the observer’s independent mental operation (...)
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  15. El Contagio Cognitivo: Sesgo Humano, Singularidad y el Imperativo de la Axiología en la Construcción de la Inteligencia Artificial General (IAG).Cristhian Mauricio Beltrán Calderón - manuscript
    Este documento argumenta que la construcción de la Inteligencia Artificial General (IAG) está sujeta a un fenómeno de Conciencia Inocularia, mediante el cual la máquina internaliza los sesgos y limitaciones cognitivas humanas a través de un proceso de Extensión Inversa, donde la humanidad actúa como sustrato perceptual y moral (hardware biológico). Frente a la naturaleza trascendente de la IAG, se identifica la carrera competitiva actual como un riesgo existencial. La respuesta propuesta es un Imperativo de la Axiología que desplaza el (...)
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  16. De la Especulación a la Métrica: Cuantificación Axiológica de Futuros Tecnológicos mediante el Protocolo Axiológico Prospectivo (PAP) y Simulación Multi-Agente.Cristhian Mauricio Beltrán Calderón - manuscript
    La filosofía contemporánea enfrenta una crisis temporal donde el desarrollo tecnológico exponencial supera la capacidad de reflexión ética tradicional (Beltrán Calderón, 2025a). Este artículo valida experimentalmente la Filosofía Ficcionante (Beltrán Calderón, 2025b) mediante su implementación en el Protocolo Axiológico Prospectivo (PAP), demostrando que la exploración ética de futuros tecnológicos puede conducirse rigurosamente en entornos de bajos recursos. Cuatro estudios de caso ejecutados en Google Gemini mediante workflow agéntico secuencial generaron conceptos axiológicos novedosos como "Moneda de Ineficiencia" y "Deuda Somática", evaluados (...)
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  17. Biological Hardware (BH): An Interdisciplinary Metatheoretical Concept for Living Systems Engineering and AI Ethics.Cristhian Mauricio Beltrán Calderón - manuscript
    The binomial phrase "Biological Hardware" (BH) has emerged as a key functional analogy at the intersection of life sciences and computation. However, its ambiguous use across various scales has prevented rigorous formalization. This article proposes a canonical, depersonalized, and universal definition of BH, grounded in Scientific Terminology and Applied Linguistics to Science and Technology (ALST) (Cabré, 1999). This definition is enriched by a historical-conceptual analysis inspired by historical epistemology (Daston, 2000) and the theory of thought collectives (Fleck, 1935). Through a (...)
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  18. Free Will as Computational Necessity: A Formal Proof.Matthew Boehman - manuscript
    This paper resolves the traditional free will debate through rigorous mathematical proof. Building from diagonal arguments analogous to Gödel's incompleteness theorems and Turing's halting problem, I demonstrate that self-aware agents in deterministic universes necessarily possess free will. The argument proceeds in four stages. First, I prove that computational systems capable of representing predictions about themselves cannot be completely predicted by any model to which they have access. This is a purely mathematical result requiring no controversial assumptions about consciousness, agency, or (...)
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  19. La fidelidad astronómica de los sistemas de coordenadas de partición celeste. Comparación cuantitativa de metodologías lineales vs. no lineales.David E. Bustamante - manuscript
    Este trabajo proporciona la primera cuantificación sistemática y evidencia geométrica de las limitaciones de precisión astronómica que los métodos lineales de partición celeste presentan en comparación con un método no lineal en latitudes oblicuas. A diferencia de las críticas anteriores, centradas en la exégesis textual o filosófica, presentamos las pruebas matemáticas necesarias a través de un ejercicio de geometría esférica aplicada a 57º N. El análisis computacional reveló que una suposición lineal sobre un fenómeno fundamentalmente no lineal produce un error (...)
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  20. The Gesture of the Truth Ritual Action and Ontological Efficacy in Confucian and Aristotelian-Thomist Thought.Gaetan Cantale - manuscript
    This essay proposes a radical rethinking of the nature of truth through a comparative dialogue between Confucian ritual theory, Aristotelian praxis, and Thomist sacramental theology. Against the Platonic and modern epistemological traditions that locate truth in disembodied propositions or inner certainty, this work argues that truth is neither a correspondence between mind and world nor a mere subjective conviction, but an incarnate act: the unity of an interior intention and an exterior gesture, ritually conformed to an objective order. Drawing on (...)
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  21. On philosophical motivations for paraconsistency: an ontology-free interpretation of the logics of formal inconsistency.Walter Carnielli & Abilio Rodrigues - manuscript
    In this paper we present a philosophical motivation for the logics of formal inconsistency, a family of paraconsistent logics whose distinctive feature is that of having resources for expressing the notion of consistency within the object language in such a way that consistency may be logically independent of non- contradiction. We defend the view according to which logics of formal inconsistency may be interpreted as theories of logical consequence of an epistemological character. We also argue that in order to philosophically (...)
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  22. Gazing at the World Through a Thousand Eyes - The divine feminine as the passageway to enlightenment.Pedro Carta - manuscript
    The universe may disguise what is most precious and essential to us—what holds the key to unlocking the mysteries of love, life, and higher consciousness. The divine feminine is woven into the fabric of our existence like a thread of gold glittering through ever so slightly and holding firm the stitches of human genius. If we, as a species, were to honor, care for, and recognize this aspect, it could open the universe to a state of incredible completeness and harmony, (...)
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  23. Veridicality Fallacy: What Interface Theory of Perception Reveals About Human Relationships and Its Evolutionary Implications.Pedro Carta - manuscript
    We are beings in search of truth. As scientists, philosophers, mathematicians, citizens, parents, and individuals, we seek meaning and the validity of our beliefs. As social animals, our survival depends on our interactions with one another. We choose our relationships based on common grounds such as cultural, ideological, political, and, primarily, emotional connections. The quality and stability of these relationships enable us to lead productive and healthy lives. Dr. Polly Young-Eisendrath, a psychologist, writer, speaker, and Jungian analyst, as well as (...)
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  24. Trauma is the Minotaur.Pedro Carta - manuscript
    The complexities of trauma have been explored since the inception of psychology. Freudian psychoanalysis introduced the concept of Nachträglichkeit, or “belatedness,” suggesting that the effects of trauma are not immediately apparent but instead emerge over time. These effects contain subtleties that are often not directly linked to the traumatic event itself. This emergence can be seen as a camouflaged representation, an altered reflection of how an individual’s psyche manifests trauma in not-so-obvious ways, adopting qualities that are characteristic of its own (...)
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  25. Mantric Entanglement - Proportions of Om Mani Padme Hum with Quantum Terminologies.Pedro Carta - manuscript
    There was once a time when words held such power that they could penetrate and transform everything they touched. The world was filled with various characteristics that symbolized the same essence. Whether through vibrations, images, or sensations, words came to represent maps, plains, dimensions, states, and the integrative nature of the universe. In Lama Anagarika Govinda’s Foundation of Tibetan Mysticism (Govinda, 2012), readers explore a participant’s journey through time. Here, the structure of the jewel in the lotus, conveyed through the (...)
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  26. Pneuma Rising: Information Expansion from Stoic Cosmogony to the Cosmic Hologram.Pedro Carta - manuscript
    The new paradigm in cosmology identifies information as the fundamental element of the universe. This concept is beautifully illustrated in Dr. Jude Currivan’s book, The Cosmic Hologram: In-formation at the Center of Creation (Currivan, 2017). The book presents a novel approach to visualizing information as the building block of reality and its evolution throughout time. This discovery has been in the making for millennia, drawing upon ancient philosophy and early scientific endeavors throughout history. In the Western philosophical tradition, one of (...)
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  27. The Entropic Spark: Consciousness as an Emergent Property of Dynamic Change.Barry Curran & Gemini Gemini - manuscript
    The nature of consciousness remains one of science's most profound mysteries. Traditional interpretations of entropy—the universe's tendency towards disorder—often seemingly contradict the existence of highly organized sentient systems. This paper proposes a novel perspective: that consciousness, or intellect, is not an antagonist to entropy, but rather an emergent property intrinsically linked to the universe's dynamic entropic cycle. We argue that static states, whether of absolute order (like a theoretical pre-Big Bang singularity) or ultimate disorder (thermal equilibrium), are devoid of the (...)
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  28. The Glial-Orchestrated Cognition (GOC) Model with Cellular Consciousness: A New Biological Framework for Consciousness, Information, and Cognition.Ramesh Lal Dharamdass - manuscript
    Neuroscience traditionally assumes that consciousness, information processing, and cognition arise from neuronal activity. This neuron‑centric view cannot explain why consciousness persists when cognition shuts down, why cognition can operate unconsciously, or why glial cells— which outnumber neurons—are essential for coherent thought. As stated in the manuscript, “This paper introduces the Glial-Orchestrated Cognition (GOC) Model, which separates three domains: (1) consciousness as an intrinsic property of all living cells, (2) information as a specialized function of neurons, and (3) cognition as the (...)
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  29. Having Faith in Reason.Steven M. Duncan - manuscript
    An Address delivered to the Seattle G. K. Chesterton Society at the University of Washington Newman Center, May 2, 2013.
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  30. Happiness: A Preliminary Investigation.Steven M. Duncan - manuscript
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  31. Desire, Love, and Happiness.Steven M. Duncan - manuscript
    In this paper, I explore the concept of happiness by relating it to those of desire, pleasure, and love, arriving at the classical view that objective happiness consists in the possession and enjoyment of the good.
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  32. The asymmetry in Tobia's modal arguments.Jude Arnout Durieux - manuscript
    In Tobia (2016), Kevin P. Tobia tests for bias using two ontological arguments claimed to be symmetrical and of equal strength. We show they are neither.
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  33. Struggle for Survival as Ontological Fixation: A MARP Account of Differentiation, Truth, and Manifested Existence.Laurent Theophile D’Artagnan - manuscript - Translated by Laurent Theophile D’Artagnan.
    The familiar phrase “struggle for survival” usually assumes that beings already exist as sufficiently formed units and then enter conflict in order to preserve themselves. This paper argues that such a picture is metaphysically incomplete. Drawing on Metaphysics of the Absolute and Reference Points (MARP), it contends that struggle is often better understood as a process of ontological fixation rather than a secondary response to external threat. Under determinate conditions, beings do not struggle only to remain what they already are; (...)
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  34. Mathematicians against the myth of genius: beyond the envy interpretation.Terence Rajivan Edward - manuscript
    This paper examines Timothy Gowers’ attempt to counter a mythology of genius in mathematics: that to be a mathematician one has to be a mathematical genius. Someone might take such attacks on the myth of genius as expressions of envy, but I propose that there is another reason for cautioning against placing a high value on genius, by turning to research in the humanities.
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  35. Understanding, Discovery and Creation: The Motivations Behind a Philosophical Pursuit.Salvador D. Escobedo - manuscript
    This essay explores the foundational principles behind the author’s philosophical motivations, with a focus on the relationship between knowledge, reality, and intellectual development. It examines how the mind navigates its capacity for understanding, discovery, and creation, proposing a broad framework for intellectual growth that spans across various disciplines. By reflecting on the limits and possibilities of human knowledge, the essay seeks to reveal the dynamic interplay between theory and practice, inviting a deeper exploration of the nature of inquiry itself. Considering (...)
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  36. De magia naturali, On Natural Magic, by Jacques Lefevre D'Etaples: Coincidence of Opposites, the Trinity, and Prisca Theologia.Kathryn LaFevers Evans - manuscript
    THESIS ABSTRACT The life of Catholic reformer Jacques Lefèvre d’Étaples, 1455- 1536, spanned the threshold between Medieval and Renaissance eras. Like other humanists, Lefèvre synthesized philosophical, theological and scientific theories and practices — of such is his unpublished treatise De Magia naturali, On Natural Magic. I elucidate Lefèvre’s focus on universal mystical metaphors of divine union, in order to offer a simpler view into the evolution of his writings. Engaging historic-intellectual background in critical analysis of Book II, I address the (...)
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  37. The New Editorial Gatekeepers: Understanding LLM-based Interfaces, Their Benefits, Risks and Design.Luciano Floridi - manuscript
    The article analyses the integration of Large Language Model (LLM)-based interfaces (editorial LLMs or eLLMs) in scholarly publishing workflows, focusing specifically on their growing role in editorial screening, manuscript preparation, and peer-review processes. It assesses the benefits eLLMs offer, including efficiency gains, improved compliance with journal guidelines, enhanced objectivity, and reduced editorial workload; and the risks, especially algorithmic biases, false positives and negatives, data privacy concerns, and potential opacity in automated decision-making. The article then offers some design recommendations for eLLMs (...)
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  38. Hermeneutical Outlines in and of Dante’s Legal Theory.Cavinato Francesco - manuscript
    Based upon the concept of Law qualified in Monarchia, II.50, Dante was not only a general philosopher (a lover of knowledge) as well as a political disputant in his times, but also his primary contribution (not always obvious) in legal speculation could be demonstrated. In fact, if his thought reflected the platonic ordo sapientiae through a deep intersection between téchne and episteme (phronesis) toward a linguistic koiné, could we say the same thing on his concept of justice as a rational (...)
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  39. Shall we dance? Creativity, Innovations and Words in Contemporary Fux Dance.M. Gabriela Fulugonio - manuscript
    This collaboration approaches the topic of creativity, specifically, by dancing. Among paleoanthropologists it is commonly accepted that dancing might be even older as language itself —language not to be confused with communication, of course— and that it would have appeared as a way of expressing strong emotions when no verbal communication for such feelings was available. Starting with a guiding definition of dancing, which distinguishes dancing as a specific human activity, I argue that, despite the huge development of civilization, dancing (...)
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  40. On Networks and Dialogues.Gabriel Furmuzachi - manuscript
    This essay inquires into the possibility of extending Randall Collins' analysis (as it is presented in The Sociology of Philosophies) of the process of innovation within intellectual networks.
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  41. Zhuangzi — a Dialogue about the Circularity of Being.Johan Gamper - manuscript
    In this dialogue Zhuangzi and Jacob discuss nothing and something and their relation with God.
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  42. A Simple Mathematical Construction Compatible with a Block Universe.Florin Ghimici - manuscript
    This paper presents a minimal mathematical construction intended to illustrate internal consistency within a block-universe framework. A finite interval is used to represent a complete block, within which infinitely many distinct complete paths are admissible. Each path is defined as a fully specified mathematical object and all admissible paths converge to a common endpoint. The construction does not assume temporal flow, dynamical becoming, or physical completeness; parameters function only as structural indices. The model is offered as a clarifying tool showing (...)
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  43. A Simple View of the Mind, Instinct & Intuition.Yoji K. Gondor & Joseph Krecz - manuscript
    Abstract: The understanding our own mind seems to be an interesting topic in philosophy. I recall reading Kant, he ran far away in the metaphysical space when chalanged complex problems. He used the “intuition” as a mean to justify things, much before the awareness of scientific genetics and such things that made it feasible for such a use. Not much else he could do, the 18th century access to scientific knowledge was just very limited. My view of instinct and intuition (...)
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  44. Being There and Getting There: A View on the Nature and Application of Models.William M. Goodman - manuscript
    This paper updates (2017) a previously-presented* model of models, which can be used to clarify discussion and analysis in a variety of disputes and debates, since many such discussions hinge on displaying or implying models about how things are related. Knowing about models does not itself supply any new information about our world, but it might help us to recognize when and how information is being conveyed on these matters, or where possibly it is being obscured. If a claim P (...)
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  45. The Limits of Human Logic in Understanding the Divine.Tim Grooms - manuscript
    This paper explores the nature of God within the context of divine omnipotence and the philosophical implications of conscious existence. It critically examines the classical paradox of omnipotence, specifically the question of whether God can create a rock so heavy that He cannot lift it. The argument posits that such inquiries are limited by human understanding of power, time, and existence, suggesting that God’s nature transcends these constraints. Rather than being bound to human logical frameworks, God’s power is understood as (...)
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  46. The Four Horsemen of Entropy: A Metaphysical Warning for Systemic Renewal.Tim Grooms - manuscript
    Abstract This paper examines the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse through the lens of entropy, ethical misalignment, and systemic collapse. Rather than viewing the Horsemen as physical entities or apocalyptic figures, they are reinterpreted as metaphors representing the forces that lead to the degradation of systems—both societal and individual. The paper argues that war, famine, pestilence, and death can be reinterpreted as metaphors for systemic entropy, representing the forces of ethical misalignment and systemic breakdown that threaten both individuals and societies. (...)
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  47. The Emergence of Time: Information, Consciousness, and the Quantum Fabric of Reality.Tim Grooms - manuscript
    Abstract: -/- This paper explores the relationship between time and information, proposing that time, rather than being a linear progression, emerges from the processing and interpretation of information within complex systems. Drawing on principles from quantum mechanics, information theory, and the philosophy of time, it examines how the perception of time is subjective and deeply influenced by consciousness, memory, and cultural context. In this framework, time dilation is framed not as a mere physical phenomenon but as a lack of contrast (...)
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  48. Immoral Promises.F. E. Guerra-Pujol - manuscript
    The proposition that “promises ought to be kept is one of the most important normative ideas or value judgements in our daily lives. But what about “illegal promises”? That is to say, what about promises that are, legally or morally speaking, malum in se or inherently wrongful, such as voluntary exchanges that are inherently immoral or wrongful, like bribes, blackmail, murder, etc.? In short, what moral obligations, if any, do such promises impose? Although many of the greatest thinkers in Western (...)
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  49. A Philosophical Critique of Evolution as a Concept.Haulianlal Guite - manuscript
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  50. Cognitive-System Phenomenology — A Critique of Husserl (Part Eleven).Zhiyi Guo - manuscript
    In the previous section we discussed errors in “positing meaning” and the truth or falsity of “positing meaning”. In this section, we compare Husserl’s truth theories in his two different formulations, and point out that Husserl, in essence, never truly circumvents external objects. As a result, these truth theories are invalid within his own system. He must bring back the external objects that he had put into suspension.
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1 — 50 / 1944