Philosophy
The philosophical framework consists of system and logic, and it has two difficulties:
1. The boundary of the system.
2. The hidden premise of logic
Logic and Systems
Exploring boundaries and hidden premises within philosophical frameworks of logic and systematic thinking.
1.The ability to grasp the appropriate system boundaries can be trained from the process of listening to music.
2.Mastering the dark prerequisites does not require as much work as mastering the boundaries of the system, it is enough to study the so-called binary issues five seriously.
System theory is very simple, just two points:
1. from details to system, back and forth repeatedly.
2. two systems with different paradigms not comparable.
For complex systems, one more point needs to be added: the structure and content of the contract may be different at different times and places.
Philosophy with methodology
It is a common thing to confuse philosophy with methodology, and this makes it seem as if the knowledge of philosophy could be endless; if it were so, it would difficult to get anything done.
Philosophy and methodology have their own fields, and the development of their respective fields has a mutual interaction.
System Boundaries
The system is too large to be fully understood. The system is inadequate, making it difficult to solve problems.
Hidden Premises
The problem with bianary theory is that it ignores the hidden premise. The representative figure is Professor Sandel, and the average person really can't stand him which shows that everyone's logic is not up to par.