Every civilization, across every age, has circled around the same quiet questions.
Why does anything exist at all?
Is reality something we discover—or something we participate in?
Are we free, or merely acting out causes set long before us?
Is the self real, or a story the mind tells itself?
Philosophy begins not with answers, but with unease—a subtle dissatisfaction with surface explanations. Science explains how things work. Religion often tells us what to believe. Philosophy sits uncomfortably in between, asking whether our deepest assumptions deserve to stand at all.
From the problem of infinite regress to the mystery of consciousness, from causality and existence to time, meaning, and liberation, human thought has repeatedly returned to a core realization: the more we know, the more fragile certainty becomes.
This blog brings together 100+ deep philosophical concepts drawn from metaphysics, epistemology, consciousness studies, existential thought, and non-dual traditions. These ideas are not meant to be consumed quickly or agreed with easily. Many contradict one another. Some dissolve the very questions they raise. Others point toward truths that language struggles to hold.
A. Causality, Existence & Metaphysics (1–25)
- Infinite Regress – An endless chain of explanations with no foundation
- First Cause – An uncaused cause that initiates all causation
- Necessary Being – Something that must exist by its nature
- Contingent Being – Something that exists dependently
- Ground of Being – Existence itself as the ultimate reality
- Brute Fact – A fact with no further explanation
- Unmoved Mover – Aristotle’s eternal source of motion
- Self-Existence (Svayambhu) – That which exists on its own
- Causal Finitism – The past cannot be infinite
- Emergent Causality – Higher-level causes emerging from lower systems
- Circular Causality – Cause and effect influencing each other
- Non-Linear Causation – Effects not proportional to causes
- Acausality – Events without cause
- Dependent Origination – Everything arises conditionally
- Cosmic Necessity – The universe could not have been otherwise
- Modal Realism – All possible worlds exist
- Ontological Dependence – One thing exists because of another
- Metaphysical Nihilism – There could have been nothing
- Existence Precedes Essence – Sartre’s view of human freedom
- Essence Precedes Existence – Classical metaphysical view
- Substance Metaphysics – Reality made of fundamental substances
- Process Philosophy – Reality as becoming, not being
- Ontological Priority – What is more fundamental
- Cosmic Self-Sufficiency – Reality needs no explanation outside itself
- Absolute Reality – Unchanging, ultimate existence
B. Knowledge, Mind & Limits of Understanding (26–50)
- Argument of Limited Perspective – Knowledge is viewpoint-bound
- Epistemic Humility – Acceptance of knowing limits
- Unknown Unknowns – What we don’t know we don’t know
- Phenomenon vs Noumenon – Appearance vs reality-in-itself
- Cognitive Bias – Systematic error in thinking
- Language Limitation – Words distort reality
- Conceptual Frameworks – Mental lenses shaping perception
- Theory-Ladenness – Observation shaped by belief
- Illusion of Understanding – Feeling of knowing without knowing
- Constructivism – Knowledge is constructed, not discovered
- Naïve Realism – World is exactly as we see it
- Indirect Realism – We know representations, not reality
- Skepticism – Doubt as a philosophical method
- Radical Doubt – Questioning everything
- Self-Reference Paradox – Systems explaining themselves
- Gödel’s Incompleteness – No system proves all truths
- Epistemic Closure – Limits beyond which knowledge can’t go
- Tacit Knowledge – Knowing without articulation
- Mystical Knowing – Direct, non-conceptual awareness
- Intellectual Intuition – Knowing without reasoning
- False Certainty – Confidence unsupported by truth
- Observer Effect – Observation alters outcome
- Map vs Territory – Models are not reality
- Hermeneutics – Interpretation as understanding
- Silence as Knowledge – Truth beyond speech
C. Self, Identity & Consciousness (51–70)
- Personal Identity Problem – What makes you “you”?
- Ship of Theseus – Identity through change
- No-Self (Anatta) – No permanent self exists
- Atman – True self beyond ego
- Ego Illusion – Self as mental construct
- Continuity of Consciousness – Awareness across time
- Hard Problem of Consciousness – Why experience exists
- Qualia – Subjective experience
- Witness Consciousness (Sakshi) – Observer of all mental states
- Extended Mind – Mind extends into tools and environment
- Narrative Self – Identity as story
- Minimal Self – Bare sense of “I am”
- Reflexive Awareness – Awareness aware of itself
- Split-Brain Identity – Multiple selves in one body
- Free Will Illusion – Choice as post-hoc narrative
- Determinism – Everything is causally fixed
- Compatibilism – Free will within determinism
- Self as Process – Identity as ongoing activity
- Self-Ownership – Authority over one’s being
- Existential Freedom – Radical responsibility for self
D. Time, Reality & Meaning (71–100)
- Illusion of Time – Time as mental construct
- Presentism – Only the present exists
- Eternalism – Past, present, future equally real
- Block Universe – Time as fixed structure
- Arrow of Time – Direction from entropy
- Timeless Reality – Existence beyond time
- Becoming vs Being – Change vs permanence
- Maya – Reality as appearance
- Lila – Cosmic play
- Cosmic Absurdity – Universe lacks inherent meaning
- Absurdism – Meaning created despite meaninglessness
- Existential Angst – Anxiety from freedom
- Teleology – Purpose-driven reality
- Anti-Teleology – No inherent purpose
- Meaning as Projection – Humans impose meaning
- Nihilism – Nothing has inherent value
- Value Realism – Values exist objectively
- Moral Relativism – Values are culture-bound
- Cosmic Indifference – Universe is unconcerned
- Tragic Wisdom – Acceptance without illusion
- Neti Neti – Not this, not that
- Non-Duality (Advaita) – No separation between self and reality
- Unity of Opposites – Dualities are one
- Paradox as Truth – Contradiction reveals depth
- Being vs Nothingness – Fundamental ontological tension
- Why Something Rather Than Nothing – Ultimate metaphysical question
- Silence of the Absolute – Ultimate reality is wordless
- Mystery as Foundation – Reality is irreducibly mysterious
- Wonder as Philosophy’s Origin – Awe precedes inquiry
- Liberation Through Understanding – Freedom via insight
A2. Causality, Existence & Metaphysics (101–160)
- Principle of Sufficient Reason – Everything must have an explanation
- Rejection of PSR – Not all facts require explanation
- Ontological Bracketing – Suspending questions of existence
- Metaphysical Grounding – What makes facts true
- Existence as Predicate (denied) – Existence is not a property
- Ontological Inflation – Multiplying entities unnecessarily
- Ontological Parsimony (Occam’s Razor) – Do not multiply causes
- Abstract Objects – Numbers, properties, universals
- Concrete Particulars – Spatiotemporal entities
- Universals Problem – Shared properties across things
- Nominalism – Only particular things exist
- Realism about Universals – Properties exist independently
- Tropes – Particularized properties
- Metaphysical Essentialism – Objects have essential properties
- Anti-Essentialism – No fixed essences
- Haecceity – Thisness of an individual
- Existential Dependence – Being relies on another being
- Grounding Regress – Explanations require deeper explanations
- Ontological Collapse – Everything reduces to one category
- Pluralistic Ontology – Multiple kinds of being
- Metaphysical Monism – Reality is fundamentally one
- Dualism – Two fundamental substances
- Pluralism – Many fundamental realities
- Panpsychism – Consciousness is fundamental
- Hylozoism – Matter is alive
- Neutral Monism – Mind and matter emerge from neutral stuff
- Ontological Naturalism – Only natural entities exist
- Supernaturalism – Reality includes non-natural entities
- Metaphysical Realism – Reality exists independently of mind
- Anti-Realism – Reality depends on conceptual schemes
- Cosmic Contingency – The universe could have failed to exist
- Existential Necessity – Existence cannot be otherwise
- Cosmic Groundlessness – No ultimate foundation
- Self-Explaining Reality – Reality explains itself
- Ontological Closure – No external explanation possible
- Creation ex Nihilo – Something from nothing
- Eternal Creation – Universe has no beginning
- Temporal Finitude – Time has a beginning
- Metaphysical Eternity – Existence beyond time
- Cosmic Cyclicality – Endless creation and dissolution
- Cosmic Asymmetry – Directional structure of reality
- Metaphysical Symmetry – Fundamental equivalence
- Ontological Depth – Reality has layered levels
- Flat Ontology – No hierarchy of being
- Event Ontology – Events are fundamental
- Thing Ontology – Objects are fundamental
- Relation Ontology – Relations are fundamental
- Structural Realism – Structure over substance
- Existence as Activity – Being is doing
- Pure Being – Existence without attributes
- Pure Potentiality – Capacity without manifestation
- Actuality vs Potentiality – What is vs what could be
- Cosmic Latency – Unmanifest reality
- Metaphysical Void – Non-being as concept
- Plenitude Principle – Everything possible exists
- Ontological Saturation – Reality is complete
- Existential Overflow – More exists than needed
- Metaphysical Minimalism – Reality is sparse
- Ontological Mystery – Being resists explanation
- Primordial Fact – Existence as the first fact
B2. Knowledge, Mind & Epistemology (161–220)
- Epistemic Justification – What makes belief reasonable
- Foundationalism – Knowledge rests on basic beliefs
- Coherentism – Beliefs justified by coherence
- Infinitism – Justification has no end
- Contextualism – Knowledge depends on context
- Relativism of Truth – Truth varies by framework
- Correspondence Theory – Truth matches reality
- Coherence Theory of Truth – Truth fits system
- Pragmatic Truth – Truth works in practice
- Deflationary Truth – Truth adds nothing
- Epistemic Virtue – Good knowing habits
- Intellectual Honesty – Commitment to truth
- Willful Ignorance – Choosing not to know
- Epistemic Injustice – Unfair credibility loss
- Hermeneutic Blindness – Lack of interpretive tools
- Cognitive Closure – Minds cannot access all truths
- Epistemic Anxiety – Fear of being wrong
- Epistemic Trust – Reliance on others
- Testimonial Knowledge – Knowing through others
- Distributed Knowledge – Knowledge spread across agents
- Embodied Cognition – Mind shaped by body
- Situated Knowledge – Knowledge from position
- Intuitionism – Knowing without inference
- Rationalism – Reason as primary source
- Empiricism – Experience as primary source
- Synthetic a Priori – Knowledge before experience
- Analytic Truth – True by definition
- Synthetic Truth – True by fact
- Epistemic Luck – True belief by chance
- Gettier Problem – Justified true belief fails
- Cognitive Framing – Presentation alters judgment
- Metacognition – Thinking about thinking
- Epistemic Overconfidence – Knowing too much too soon
- Epistemic Minimalism – Knowing only what’s needed
- Depth vs Breadth of Knowledge – Focus tradeoff
- Wisdom vs Knowledge – Knowing how to live
- Negative Capability – Holding uncertainty
- Apophatic Knowing – Knowing by negation
- Intellectual Surrender – Letting go of certainty
- Knowing by Being – Identity-based knowledge
- Transformative Knowledge – Knowledge that changes knower
- Insight vs Information – Seeing vs storing
- Epistemic Silence – Refusal to over-explain
- Unknowability Thesis – Some truths inaccessible
- Ineffability – Cannot be spoken
- Pre-Conceptual Awareness – Before thought
- Non-Propositional Knowledge – Knowing without facts
- Epistemic Groundlessness – No final justification
- Cognitive Dissonance – Conflict in belief
- Belief Perseverance – Holding false beliefs
- Epistemic Liberation – Freedom through clarity
- False Enlightenment – Mistaking insight
- Epistemic Patience – Slow understanding
- Intellectual Courage – Facing unsettling truths
- Epistemic Fatigue – Overthinking collapse
- Clarity through Simplicity – Less reveals more
- Insight Saturation – Too much knowing
- Understanding as Integration – Wholeness of knowledge
- Epistemic Ground – That on which knowing rests
- Awareness as Primary – Consciousness before knowledge
C2. Self, Consciousness & Identity (221–260)
- Subject–Object Duality – Knower vs known
- Collapse of Subject–Object – Non-dual awareness
- Pre-Egoic Consciousness – Awareness before self
- Constructed Identity – Self as social product
- Relational Self – Identity through relations
- Performative Self – Identity enacted
- Psychological Continuity – Memory-based identity
- Biological Continuity – Body-based identity
- Pattern Identity – Self as pattern
- Self-Referential Loop – Mind observing itself
- Phenomenal Self-Model – Brain’s self-simulation
- Transparency of Experience – Illusion of immediacy
- Ownership Illusion – “My” thoughts
- Agency Illusion – Sense of control
- Minimal Phenomenal Selfhood – Bare awareness
- Self as Witness Only – Non-doer identity
- Self as Role – Contextual identity
- Multiplicity of Selves – Many identities
- Core Self – Stable center
- No Core Self – Empty center
- Continuity without Identity – Change without self
- Self-Transcendence – Going beyond self
- Identity Dissolution – Loss of ego boundaries
- Experiential Unity – One field of experience
- Fragmented Consciousness – Disunified awareness
- Attention as Self – What you attend to
- Self as Narrative Gravity – Story pulls identity
- Non-Local Consciousness – Beyond body
- Consciousness as Field – Shared awareness
- Self as Function – Not substance
- Reflexive Looping – Awareness turning inward
- Awareness without Object – Pure knowing
- Self-Liberation – Freedom from identity
- Ego Death – Collapse of self-structure
- Post-Ego Integration – Return without illusion
- Witness Stability – Unchanging observer
- Identity as Habit – Repeated patterns
- Self as Constraint – Limiting structure
- Self as Gateway – Path to transcendence
- Identity as Mistake – Fundamental misidentification
D2. Time, Meaning & Ultimate Questions (261–300)
- Psychological Time – Time as memory
- Cosmic Time – Universal process
- Event Time – Time as change
- Timeless Awareness – Eternal now
- Existential Temporality – Being-toward-death
- Kairos vs Chronos – Meaningful vs measured time
- Finite Meaning – Temporary significance
- Infinite Meaning – Transcendent value
- Meaning Collapse – Loss of purpose
- Reconstruction of Meaning – Creating anew
- Cosmic Meaninglessness – No given purpose
- Personal Meaning – Chosen purpose
- Transpersonal Meaning – Beyond individual
- Sacred Meaning – Holy significance
- Meaning through Action – Karma-based meaning
- Meaning through Understanding – Jnana-based meaning
- Meaning through Devotion – Bhakti-based meaning
- Silence as Meaning – Meaning without words
- Absence as Presence – Meaning in emptiness
- Tragic Acceptance – Meaning without hope
- Joy without Reason – Groundless bliss
- Cosmic Playfulness – Reality as game
- Paradoxical Meaning – Meaning through contradiction
- Unity of Meaning and Being – To exist is to mean
- Existential Risk – Fragility of meaning
- Ultimate Concern – What matters most
- Final Questions – Questions without answers
- End of Why – Cessation of explanation
- Return to Wonder – Childlike awe
- Sacred Ignorance – Knowing not-knowing
- Liberation from Meaning – Freedom from purpose
- Meaning as Attachment – Binding force
- Letting Go of Meaning – Ultimate release
- Freedom Beyond Meaning – Moksha-like state
- Stillness of Being – Meaningless fullness
- Existence as Gift – Gratuitous being
- Grace without Cause – Unearned reality
- Mystery without Solution – Eternal question
- Peace beyond Understanding – Shanti
- Liberation Beyond Concepts – Freedom itself
Below is a curated list of major philosophical “Problems”, grouped by theme, in the same spirit as the Problem of Evil.
A. God, Reality & Metaphysics
- Problem of Evil – How can evil exist if God is omnipotent, omniscient, and benevolent?
- Problem of Suffering – Why do innocent beings suffer?
- Problem of Divine Hiddenness – Why is God not more evident?
- Problem of Free Will – Can free will exist in a determined universe?
- Problem of Foreknowledge – If God knows the future, are choices free?
- Problem of Creation – Why create anything at all?
- Problem of Infinite Regress – Must explanations end somewhere?
- Problem of First Cause – Why does causation begin?
- Problem of Contingency – Why is there something rather than nothing?
- Problem of Necessary Being – What must exist?
- Problem of Evil Natural vs Moral – Why natural disasters vs human evil?
- Problem of Hell – Is eternal punishment just?
- Problem of Miracles – Can natural laws be violated?
- Problem of Providence – How does divine control coexist with freedom?
- Problem of Theodicy – Can evil be justified?
B. Knowledge, Truth & Epistemology
- Problem of Skepticism – How can we know anything?
- Problem of Induction – Why assume the future resembles the past?
- Problem of Other Minds – How do we know others are conscious?
- Problem of Certainty – Can knowledge ever be absolute?
- Problem of Justification – What justifies beliefs?
- Problem of Regress in Knowledge – Beliefs need reasons endlessly?
- Problem of Testimony – When should we trust others?
- Problem of Perception – Do we see reality or representations?
- Problem of Illusion – How do errors arise?
- Problem of Language – Can words capture truth?
- Problem of Meaning – How do symbols mean anything?
- Problem of Relativism – Is truth culture-dependent?
- Problem of Epistemic Authority – Who decides truth?
- Problem of Silence – Why ultimate truths evade language?
- Problem of Bias – Can we escape subjectivity?
C. Mind, Self & Consciousness
- Hard Problem of Consciousness – Why does experience exist?
- Problem of Personal Identity – What makes a person the same over time?
- Problem of the Self – Is there a real self or just processes?
- Problem of Qualia – Can subjective experience be explained?
- Problem of Mental Causation – How does mind affect matter?
- Problem of Free Will vs Determinism – Choice or causation?
- Problem of Responsibility – Can we be blamed without freedom?
- Problem of Ego – Is the self an illusion?
- Problem of Conscious Unity – Why experience is unified?
- Problem of Artificial Consciousness – Can machines be aware?
D. Ethics, Value & Meaning
- Problem of Moral Evil – Why humans do evil?
- Problem of Moral Responsibility – Are we accountable?
- Problem of Moral Knowledge – How do we know right from wrong?
- Problem of Moral Relativism – Are morals subjective?
- Problem of Value – What makes something good?
- Problem of Meaning of Life – Why live?
- Problem of Nihilism – If nothing matters, why act?
- Problem of Absurdity – Meaning in an indifferent universe?
- Problem of Altruism – Why care for others?
- Problem of Evil Means – Can evil means justify good ends?
E. Time, Death & Existence
- Problem of Time – Is time real or an illusion?
- Problem of Change – How can things change and remain the same?
- Problem of Persistence – How objects endure over time?
- Problem of Death – Why fear non-existence?
- Problem of Immortality – Would eternal life be meaningful?
- Problem of Beginning – Did time begin?
- Problem of Eternity – What does timelessness mean?
- Problem of Identity After Death – Who survives?
- Problem of Fate – Is destiny fixed?
- Problem of Nothingness – What is nothing?
F. Society, Power & Reality
- Problem of Authority – Who should rule?
- Problem of Justice – What is fair?
- Problem of Inequality – Why injustice persists?
- Problem of Power – Does power corrupt?
- Problem of Ideology – How beliefs shape reality?
- Problem of Social Construction – What is real vs made?
- Problem of Freedom – Are we truly free?
- Problem of Progress – Is history improving?
- Problem of Violence – Why conflict?
- Problem of Trust – Can society function without it?
G. Ultimate & Existential Problems
- Problem of Ultimate Meaning – Does existence have a purpose?
- Problem of Mystery – Why reality resists explanation?
- Problem of Transcendence – Is there something beyond?
- Problem of Silence of God – Why no answer?
- Problem of Enlightenment – Why insight doesn’t last?
- Problem of Liberation – What does freedom really mean?
- Problem of Ignorance (Avidya) – Why we don’t see truth?
- Problem of Maya – Why illusion appears real?
- Problem of Duality – Why subject-object split?
- Problem of Non-Dual Experience – How unity appears as multiplicity?
Below is a clean, structured map of the major philosophical domains, followed by lesser-known but equally powerful ones. This is perfect reference material for a blog or explainer.
1. Core Branches of Philosophy (Foundational)
These are the pillars—the first words every philosophy student encounters.
- Ontology – Study of being and existence
- Epistemology – Study of knowledge and knowing
- Metaphysics – Study of ultimate reality beyond physics
- Logic – Study of reasoning and valid inference
- Ethics – Study of morality and right action
- Axiology – Study of value (good, bad, worthwhile)
2. Subfields Closely Related to Ontology & Epistemology
These refine or extend the two you mentioned.
- Cosmology – Nature and origin of the universe
- Teleology – Purpose and ends
- Phenomenology – Structures of lived experience
- Hermeneutics – Interpretation and meaning
- Philosophy of Mind – Consciousness, thought, self
- Philosophy of Language – Meaning, reference, truth
- Philosophy of Science – Nature of scientific knowledge
- Philosophy of Mathematics – Status of mathematical truths
- Philosophy of Logic – Foundations of reasoning
- Philosophy of Religion – God, faith, transcendence
- Philosophy of Action – Agency and intention
- Metaphilosophy – Philosophy about philosophy
3. Value, Meaning & Human Life
Where ontology and epistemology meet lived experience.
- Ethics (Normative) – What we ought to do
- Metaethics – What moral claims mean
- Moral Psychology – How moral thinking works
- Political Philosophy – Power, justice, state
- Social Philosophy – Society and social reality
- Existentialism – Meaning, freedom, anxiety
- Nihilism – Rejection of inherent meaning
- Humanism – Human-centered meaning and values
- Virtue Ethics – Character over rules
- Care Ethics – Ethics of relationships
- Environmental Philosophy – Nature and value
- Bioethics – Ethics of life and medicine
4. Knowledge, Mind & Interpretation (Advanced)
Deep epistemic lenses.
- Skepticism – Doubt about knowledge
- Pragmatism – Truth as practical consequence
- Rationalism – Knowledge from reason
- Empiricism – Knowledge from experience
- Constructivism – Knowledge as constructed
- Relativism – Truth depends on framework
- Realism – Mind-independent reality
- Anti-Realism – Reality depends on cognition
- Idealism – Reality is mental
- Materialism / Physicalism – Reality is physical
- Dualism – Mind and matter distinct
- Monism – Reality is one
- Pluralism – Reality is many
5. Experience, Consciousness & Being
Where Eastern and Western thought often converge.
- Non-Dualism (Advaita) – No separation between self and reality
- Mysticism – Direct experience of ultimate reality
- Contemplative Philosophy – Insight through inner practice
- Philosophy of Consciousness – Subjective experience
- Panpsychism – Consciousness everywhere
- Process Philosophy – Reality as becoming
- Existential Phenomenology – Lived being-in-the-world
6. Lesser-Known but Powerful “-ologies”
Great for depth and originality in a blog.
- Onto-epistemology – Being and knowing as inseparable
- Alethiology – Study of truth
- Praxeology – Study of human action
- Thanatology – Study of death
- Eschatology – End of time, final things
- Philosophical Anthropology – Nature of the human
- Noetics – Study of intellect and intuition
- Epistemic Justice – Fairness in knowledge systems
- Chronology (philosophical) – Nature of time
- Teleonomy – Apparent purpose without intention
7. Eastern Philosophy Equivalents (Conceptual Domains)
Not named as “-ology” but function similarly.
- Vedanta – Nature of reality and self
- Nyaya – Logic and epistemology
- Samkhya – Ontology of consciousness and matter
- Mimamsa – Interpretation and duty
- Yoga Philosophy – Mind, suffering, liberation
- Buddhist Epistemology – Knowledge and perception
- Taoist Metaphysics – Way of nature
- Confucian Ethics – Moral cultivation
8. Big-Picture Unifying Terms
These don’t fit neatly into one category.
- Worldview – Integrated understanding of reality
- Paradigm – Framework shaping inquiry
- First Philosophy – Ultimate foundational inquiry
- Wisdom Traditions – Knowledge aimed at liberation
- Speculative Philosophy – Beyond empirical limits
- Critical Theory – Knowledge and power
- Postmodern Philosophy – Suspicion of grand narratives
Simple Summary for Your Blog
- Ontology asks: What exists?
- Epistemology asks: How do we know?
- Axiology/Ethics asks: What matters?
- Phenomenology asks: How does it appear?
- Metaphysics asks: What is ultimately real?
4. Knowledge, Mind & Interpretation (Advanced) — Expanded
Core Epistemic Positions
- Fallibilism – All knowledge is provisional and revisable
- Foundationalism – Knowledge rests on basic beliefs
- Coherentism – Beliefs justified by mutual coherence
- Infinitism – Justification requires infinite reasons
- Contextualism – Knowledge standards vary by context
- Invariantism – Knowledge standards are fixed
- Evidentialism – Beliefs justified by evidence
- Reliabilism – Knowledge from reliable processes
- Virtue Epistemology – Knowledge as intellectual character
- Internalism – Justification accessible to the knower
- Externalism – Justification independent of awareness
Truth & Meaning Theories
- Correspondence Theory – Truth matches reality
- Coherence Theory of Truth – Truth fits a belief system
- Pragmatic Theory of Truth – Truth works in practice
- Deflationary Theory – Truth adds nothing substantive
- Minimalism – Truth is linguistic convenience
- Pluralist Theories of Truth – Different truths for different domains
- Semantic Externalism – Meaning partly outside the mind
- Use Theory of Meaning – Meaning arises from use
Interpretation & Understanding
- Hermeneutic Phenomenology – Meaning emerges through lived interpretation
- Interpretivism – Understanding requires interpretation
- Structuralism – Meaning from underlying structures
- Post-Structuralism – Meaning is unstable and shifting
- Deconstruction – Texts undermine their own claims
- Intentionalism – Meaning tied to author’s intent
- Anti-Intentionalism – Meaning independent of intent
- Narrativism – Knowledge structured as stories
Mind, Consciousness & Cognition
- Functionalism – Mind defined by function, not substance
- Eliminative Materialism – Folk psychology is false
- Emergentism – Mind arises from but isn’t reducible to matter
- Panpsychism – Consciousness is fundamental everywhere
- Neutral Monism – Mind and matter share a neutral base
- Embodied Cognition – Mind shaped by body
- Enactivism – Knowing through action
- Extended Mind Thesis – Mind extends into tools and world
- Predictive Processing – Mind as prediction engine
Limits, Doubt & Uncertainty
- Pyrrhonian Skepticism – Suspension of judgment
- Academic Skepticism – Knowledge impossible, belief probable
- Epistemic Modesty – Acceptance of deep limits
- Ignorance Realism – Ignorance is unavoidable
- Unknown Unknowns – Limits beyond awareness
- Epistemic Closure Failure – Knowledge doesn’t transfer
- Gettier Problem – Justified true belief isn’t knowledge
- Problem of Induction – Future need not resemble past
Social & Political Epistemology
- Social Epistemology – Knowledge as collective
- Testimonial Injustice – Unfair credibility deficits
- Hermeneutical Injustice – Lack of concepts to express experience
- Epistemic Authority – Who gets believed
- Standpoint Epistemology – Knowledge shaped by social position
- Power-Knowledge – Knowledge intertwined with power
- Epistemic Bubbles – Limited information environments
- Echo Chambers – Self-reinforcing belief systems
Meta-Epistemology (Very Deep)
- Naturalized Epistemology – Knowledge studied scientifically
- Formal Epistemology – Knowledge via logic and probability
- Bayesian Epistemology – Belief updating via probability
- Evolutionary Epistemology – Knowledge shaped by survival
- Meta-Knowledge – Knowing about knowing
- Epistemic Circularity – Knowledge justifies itself
- Onto-Epistemology – Being and knowing inseparable
Eastern & Non-Western Epistemic Views
- Pramana Theory (Nyaya) – Valid means of knowledge
- Direct Perception (Pratyaksha) – Immediate knowing
- Inference (Anumana) – Knowledge by reasoning
- Testimony (Shabda) – Knowledge via reliable word
- Avidya – Ignorance as root of error
- Jnana – Liberating knowledge
- Prajna – Insight beyond duality
- Non-Conceptual Awareness – Knowing without thought
One-line synthesis for your blog
Epistemology isn’t about what we know—it’s about how reality appears when filtered through mind, language, power, and limitation.