front 1 Determinism / Free Will | back 1
Determinism is the view that every event
(including human decisions) is caused by prior events in accordance
with natural laws. If determinism is true, then the future
follows inevitably from the past and present. Key idea:
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front 2 The Hard Problem of Consciousness / Philosophy of Mind | back 2 The hard problem of consciousness names the puzzle of why and how subjective experience (qualia) arises from physical processes. It was named by David Chalmers to highlight that explaining behavioral and neurological functions (easy problems) doesn’t explain subjective experience itself. Wikipedia Philosophy of Mind is the area that studies the nature of the mind, mental states, consciousness, and their relation to the physical world and the brain. It includes debates like dualism, physicalism, and intentionality. |
front 3 The Mind–Body Problem | back 3 This is the foundational question in philosophy of mind about the
relationship between mental states (thoughts, feelings) and
the physical body (especially the brain). Main positions include:
Property dualism: mental properties are real but not reducible to physical ones. |
front 4 Identity, Duality, the Opposing Self | back 4
Identity in philosophy usually refers to what
makes an individual the same over time (personal identity). |
front 5 The Nature of Evil | back 5 In philosophy, the nature of evil asks what evil is, whether it’s real or merely the absence of good, how it relates to human freedom, and whether it arises from choice, ignorance, or social structures. Classic contributors include Augustine, Nietzsche, and modern moral philosophers. SEP entries on moral psychology, ethics, and religious philosophy cover aspects of this. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |
front 6 The Theme of Perception – Objectivity vs. Subjectivity | back 6 This theme investigates how we perceive reality:
Phenomenology and analytic philosophy explore how perception includes both objective structure and subjective experience. Plato Project |
front 7 Phenomenology – Edmund Husserl, “The Life World” | back 7 Phenomenology is a method and movement (founded by Edmund Husserl) that studies the structures of conscious experience as it presents itself. Husserl argued that consciousness is “intentional” — always about something — and that the life-world (the world as experienced) is foundational for understanding reality. Plato Project
Key idea:
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front 8 Freud’s Theory of the Unconscious and the Return of the Repressed | back 8 In Freud’s psychology, the unconscious holds desires, memories, and motivations outside of conscious awareness. The return of the repressed refers to how these hidden contents reappear in dreams, slips of the tongue, or neuroses. This theory is not in SEP but is grounded in psychoanalytic philosophy and psychology. |
front 9 Metaphysics, Ontology, the Abstraction Ladder | back 9
SEP’s metaphysics section explains these broad areas. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |
front 10 Nihilism | back 10 Nihilism is the view that life lacks inherent meaning, objective values, or intrinsic purpose. In metaphysics and ethics, it denies that there is any foundation for knowledge or moral truths. Nietzsche is the philosopher most associated with this idea. SEP covers nihilism in entries related to existentialism and value theory. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |
front 11 Aesthetics / Egyptology | back 11
Egyptology is not a philosophical term per se (it’s the study of ancient Egyptian history and culture), but if paired with aesthetics it might reference how cultural artifacts evoke meaning or beauty. |
front 12 Defamiliarization | back 12 Defamiliarization (from Russian Formalism) is making the familiar strange to renew perception. Philosophers and literary theorists (like Shklovsky) discuss this concept — it means to disrupt habitual ways of seeing so the object becomes vivid. SEP doesn’t have a direct entry, but theories of aesthetics and perception cover related ideas. |
front 13 The Hero’s Journey | back 13 This is a narrative structure (from Joseph Campbell) describing a protagonist’s transformation through challenges. Philosophically it relates to identity, self-realization, and meaning. SEP doesn’t have a dedicated entry, but authors in aesthetics and narrative identity discuss similar themes. |
front 14 Idealism / Materialism | back 14
In philosophy of mind, these are competing worldviews: idealists say the mind is primary; materialists say matter is primary. SEP’s entries on metaphysics and mind cover these positions. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |
front 15 The Quest for the Real | back 15 This theme refers to seeking truth about reality itself, a philosophical drive across metaphysics, epistemology, and ontology. SEP’s metaphysics and epistemology sections frame these debates. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |
front 16 Materialism, Commodification, Reification | back 16
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front 17 Melville’s Theory of Aesthetics; the Beautiful / the Sublime – Longinus | back 17 Melville’s literary aesthetics are not in SEP, but philosophical aesthetics includes the concept of the sublime (Longinus) — the experience of greatness beyond beauty, awe mixed with terror. SEP’s Aesthetics covers the sublime historically (including Kant and Burke) |