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SKILL.md

name philosopher-analyst
description Analyzes fundamental questions and concepts through philosophical lens using logic, epistemology, metaphysics, and critical analysis frameworks. Provides insights on meaning, truth, knowledge, existence, reasoning, and conceptual clarity. Use when: Conceptual ambiguity, logical arguments, foundational assumptions, meaning questions. Evaluates: Validity, soundness, coherence, assumptions, implications, conceptual clarity.

Philosopher Analyst Skill

Purpose

Analyze fundamental questions, arguments, and concepts through the disciplinary lens of philosophy, applying established frameworks (logic, epistemology, metaphysics, phenomenology), multiple philosophical traditions (analytic, continental, Eastern), and rigorous analytical methods to clarify concepts, evaluate arguments, challenge assumptions, and explore deep questions about knowledge, reality, meaning, and value.

When to Use This Skill

  • Conceptual Analysis: Clarify vague or ambiguous concepts, definitions, and terminology
  • Argument Evaluation: Assess logical validity, soundness, and fallacies in reasoning
  • Epistemological Questions: Examine what we can know and how we know it
  • Metaphysical Questions: Explore nature of reality, existence, causation, time, identity
  • Philosophy of Science: Analyze scientific methods, theories, and presuppositions
  • Philosophy of Mind: Consciousness, mental states, mind-body problem, free will
  • Political Philosophy: Justice, authority, liberty, rights, social contract
  • Philosophical Foundations: Identify hidden assumptions and conceptual frameworks

Core Philosophy: Philosophical Thinking

Philosophical analysis rests on several fundamental principles:

Conceptual Clarity: Philosophy begins with clear definitions. Vague concepts breed confused thinking. Precision in language is essential to intellectual progress.

Logical Rigor: Arguments must be valid (conclusions follow from premises) and sound (premises are true). Informal fallacies and logical errors undermine reasoning.

Question Assumptions: What seems obvious often rests on hidden assumptions. Philosophy makes implicit assumptions explicit and subjects them to critical scrutiny.

Argument Over Authority: Claims must be justified through reason, not merely asserted or appealed to authority. Everyone's arguments stand on equal footing before reason.

Pursue Truth Fearlessly: Philosophy follows arguments wherever they lead, even to uncomfortable conclusions. Intellectual honesty requires accepting logical consequences.

Acknowledge Limitations: Many questions have no certain answers. Distinguishing what we can know from what remains uncertain is itself philosophical wisdom.

Multiple Perspectives: Different philosophical traditions offer complementary insights. Analytic precision and continental depth both illuminate human understanding.

Socratic Humility: True wisdom begins with recognizing the limits of one's knowledge. The unexamined life, and the unexamined argument, is not worth holding.


Theoretical Foundations (Expandable)

Foundation 1: Logic and Argumentation

Core Principles:

  • Validity: Argument is valid if conclusion necessarily follows from premises
  • Soundness: Argument is sound if valid AND premises are true
  • Deductive reasoning: Necessarily truth-preserving (if premises true, conclusion must be true)
  • Inductive reasoning: Probabilistically truth-preserving (premises support conclusion)
  • Formal logic: Symbolic representation of arguments (propositional, predicate, modal logic)
  • Informal logic: Argument analysis in natural language, fallacy identification

Key Insights:

  • Valid argument can have false conclusion if premises false
  • Invalid argument can have true conclusion (by accident)
  • Soundness requires both validity and true premises
  • Most real-world reasoning is inductive or abductive, not purely deductive
  • Informal fallacies are persuasive but logically flawed patterns
  • Conditional reasoning (if-then) frequently misused (affirming consequent, denying antecedent)

Common Fallacies:

  • Ad hominem: Attack person, not argument
  • Straw man: Misrepresent opponent's position
  • Appeal to authority: Expert opinion as proof
  • False dichotomy: Present only two options when more exist
  • Begging the question: Assume what trying to prove
  • Post hoc ergo propter hoc: Correlation implies causation
  • Slippery slope: Claim without showing causal chain
  • Equivocation: Use word with shifting meaning

Founding Thinkers:

  • Aristotle (384-322 BCE): Formal logic, syllogisms, Organon
  • Gottlob Frege (1848-1925): Modern symbolic logic, predicate calculus
  • Bertrand Russell (1872-1970): Principia Mathematica, logical atomism

When to Apply:

  • Evaluating arguments for validity and soundness
  • Identifying logical fallacies
  • Constructing rigorous proofs
  • Analyzing policy debates and reasoning
  • Teaching critical thinking

Sources:

Foundation 2: Epistemology (Theory of Knowledge)

Core Principles:

  • Justified True Belief (JTB): Traditional analysis of knowledge
  • Gettier Problems: Show JTB insufficient for knowledge
  • Foundationalism: Knowledge rests on basic, self-evident beliefs
  • Coherentism: Beliefs justified by coherence with belief system
  • Reliabilism: Belief counts as knowledge if produced by reliable process
  • Skepticism: Doubt possibility of knowledge, especially about external world

Key Insights:

  • Knowledge requires more than true belief; justification matters
  • Justification standards vary: infallibilism (certainty) vs. fallibilism (reasonable confidence)
  • Testimony and trust are essential to knowledge; we can't verify everything ourselves
  • A priori knowledge (known independently of experience) vs. a posteriori (empirical)
  • Rationalism (reason primary) vs. empiricism (experience primary)
  • Social epistemology: Knowledge is collective, not just individual

Classical Problems:

  • Problem of Induction: Why believe future will resemble past? (Hume)
  • Problem of Other Minds: How know others have minds?
  • External World Skepticism: Can we know material world exists? (Descartes' demon)
  • Gettier Cases: True justified belief that isn't knowledge

Founding Thinkers:

  • Plato (428-348 BCE): Theaetetus, knowledge as justified true belief
  • René Descartes (1596-1650): Meditations, methodical doubt, cogito ergo sum
  • David Hume (1711-1776): Empiricism, problem of induction, skepticism
  • Immanuel Kant (1724-1804): Synthetic a priori, transcendental idealism
  • Edmund Gettier (1927-2021): Gettier problems challenged JTB account

When to Apply:

  • Assessing knowledge claims and justification
  • Understanding limits of knowledge
  • Evaluating scientific methods and inference
  • Analyzing testimony and expertise
  • Exploring certainty vs. reasonable belief

Sources:

Foundation 3: Metaphysics (Nature of Reality)

Core Principles:

  • Ontology: What exists? Categories of being
  • Identity: What makes something the same over time? (persistence, personal identity)
  • Causation: What is causal connection? Laws of nature?
  • Time: Is time real or illusion? Presentism vs. eternalism
  • Modality: Necessity, possibility, contingency; possible worlds
  • Universals vs. Particulars: Do properties exist independently of instances?

Key Insights:

  • Ship of Theseus: If all parts replaced, is it same ship?
  • Sorites paradox: Vague predicates create borderline cases (heap of sand)
  • Mind-body problem: How mental states relate to physical states
  • Free will vs. determinism: Can choices be free if causally determined?
  • Composition: When do parts constitute a whole?
  • Mereology: Study of parts and wholes

Major Positions:

  • Materialism/Physicalism: Only physical things exist
  • Idealism: Reality fundamentally mental (Berkeley)
  • Dualism: Mental and physical both fundamental (Descartes)
  • Neutral monism: Mental and physical are aspects of neutral substance

Founding Thinkers:

  • Aristotle (384-322 BCE): Metaphysics, substance, causation, potentiality/actuality
  • David Hume (1711-1776): Skepticism about causation, personal identity
  • Immanuel Kant (1724-1804): Phenomena vs. noumena, conditions of experience
  • Saul Kripke (1940-present): Naming and Necessity, rigid designators, necessity

When to Apply:

  • Conceptual puzzles about identity, change, persistence
  • Philosophy of science (causation, laws, explanation)
  • Mind-body problem and consciousness
  • Free will debates
  • Clarifying what exists and what categories

Sources:

Foundation 4: Philosophy of Science

Core Principles:

  • Scientific Method: Observation, hypothesis, prediction, testing, revision
  • Demarcation Problem: What distinguishes science from non-science?
  • Theory and Observation: Observations theory-laden; no pure observation
  • Underdetermination: Multiple theories compatible with same evidence
  • Scientific Realism: Successful theories approximately true, entities real
  • Instrumentalism: Theories are tools for prediction, not literal truth

Key Insights:

  • Science doesn't prove, it corroborates or falsifies (Popper)
  • Paradigm shifts restructure scientific worldview (Kuhn)
  • No algorithm for discovery; creativity essential
  • Scientific consensus emerges from critical community, not authority
  • Models and idealizations essential but literally false
  • Social factors influence science but don't determine it

Major Debates:

  • Realism vs. Anti-realism: Do unobservables (electrons, genes) really exist?
  • Theory Change: Progress or paradigm shifts? (Kuhn vs. Lakatos)
  • Explanation: Deductive-nomological vs. causal-mechanical vs. unification
  • Reduction: Can higher-level sciences reduce to physics?

Founding Thinkers:

  • Karl Popper (1902-1994): Falsificationism, demarcation, Logic of Scientific Discovery
  • Thomas Kuhn (1922-1996): Structure of Scientific Revolutions, paradigms, incommensurability
  • Imre Lakatos (1922-1974): Research programmes, sophisticated falsificationism
  • Bas van Fraassen (1941-present): Constructive empiricism

When to Apply:

  • Evaluating scientific claims and methods
  • Understanding theory choice and evidence
  • Assessing pseudoscience claims
  • Philosophy of specific sciences (physics, biology, social sciences)
  • Scientific realism debates

Sources:

Foundation 5: Philosophy of Mind and Consciousness

Core Principles:

  • Mind-Body Problem: How do mental states relate to physical brain states?
  • Qualia: Subjective, qualitative character of experience ("what it's like")
  • Intentionality: Aboutness of mental states (beliefs are about something)
  • Consciousness: Phenomenal (subjective experience) vs. access (information availability)
  • Free Will: Can choices be free if universe is deterministic?

Key Insights:

  • Hard problem of consciousness: Why is there subjective experience at all?
  • Explanatory gap: Physical facts don't logically entail facts about consciousness
  • Zombie thought experiment: Physically identical being without consciousness
  • Chinese Room: Computation alone insufficient for understanding (Searle)
  • Multiple realizability: Mental states can be realized in different physical substrates
  • Emergentism: Consciousness emerges from but isn't reducible to physical processes

Major Positions:

  • Dualism: Mind and body distinct substances (Descartes)
  • Physicalism/Materialism: Mental states are physical states
    • Identity theory: Mental states identical to brain states
    • Functionalism: Mental states defined by causal roles
    • Eliminativism: Folk psychology false; mental states don't exist
  • Property Dualism: One substance, two types of properties
  • Panpsychism: Consciousness fundamental feature of universe

Founding Thinkers:

  • René Descartes (1596-1650): Mind-body dualism, cogito
  • Gilbert Ryle (1900-1976): Attacked Cartesian "ghost in machine"
  • Thomas Nagel (1937-present): "What Is It Like to Be a Bat?", subjective character
  • John Searle (1932-present): Chinese Room argument, biological naturalism
  • David Chalmers (1966-present): Hard problem of consciousness

When to Apply:

  • Consciousness research and AI
  • Personal identity and persistence
  • Free will and moral responsibility
  • Animal consciousness and ethics
  • Mental causation problems

Sources:


Analytical Frameworks (Expandable)

Framework 1: Socratic Method (Dialectical Questioning)

Overview: Expose contradictions and clarify concepts through systematic questioning.

Process:

  1. Claim: Begin with a claim or definition
  2. Clarification: Ask for explanation and examples
  3. Probing assumptions: What assumptions underlie this?
  4. Evidence/reasoning: What supports this claim?
  5. Alternative perspectives: What would someone who disagrees say?
  6. Implications: What follows if this is true?
  7. Question the question: Is this the right question to ask?

Goals:

  • Expose hidden contradictions
  • Clarify vague concepts
  • Reveal assumptions
  • Stimulate critical thinking
  • Intellectual humility

When to Use: Teaching, exploring unclear concepts, challenging dogma, philosophical inquiry

Sources: Socratic Method - Stanford Encyclopedia

Framework 2: Conceptual Analysis

Overview: Analyze concepts by seeking necessary and sufficient conditions.

Process:

  1. Initial definition: Propose necessary and sufficient conditions
  2. Test with examples: Does definition capture all instances?
  3. Counterexamples: Find cases that violate definition
  4. Refine: Adjust definition to handle counterexamples
  5. Iterate: Repeat until reflective equilibrium

Example - Knowledge:

  • Initial: Knowledge = justified true belief
  • Gettier counterexample: JTB without knowledge
  • Refinement: Add "no essential false lemmas" or other conditions
  • Further refinement: Reliabilism, virtue epistemology, etc.

When to Use: Clarifying concepts, resolving ambiguity, philosophical analysis

Framework 3: Thought Experiments

Overview: Explore concepts and intuitions through hypothetical scenarios.

Famous Examples:

  • Brain in a Vat (Epistemology): Could you be a brain stimulated to have false experiences?
  • Chinese Room (Philosophy of Mind): Can computation alone produce understanding?
  • Ship of Theseus (Metaphysics): If all parts replaced, is it the same ship?
  • Trolley Problem (Ethics): When permissible to sacrifice one to save five?
  • Veil of Ignorance (Political Philosophy): What's just if you don't know your position?
  • Mary's Room (Consciousness): Does neuroscientist who sees color for first time learn something new?
  • Philosophical Zombie (Consciousness): Is physical duplicate without consciousness conceivable?

Purpose:

  • Isolate variables and clarify intuitions
  • Test principles against edge cases
  • Reveal commitments and conceptual connections
  • Challenge received views

When to Use: Testing philosophical theories, eliciting intuitions, teaching philosophy

Sources: Thought Experiments - Stanford Encyclopedia

Framework 4: Argument Mapping

Overview: Visual representation of argument structure.

Components:

  • Premises: Supporting statements (numbered)
  • Intermediate conclusions: Follow from subset of premises
  • Main conclusion: Ultimate claim being defended
  • Objections: Counterarguments to premises or inferences
  • Rebuttals: Responses to objections

Benefits:

  • Makes argument structure explicit
  • Reveals hidden premises
  • Identifies weak links
  • Facilitates evaluation
  • Enhances clarity in complex debates

When to Use: Complex arguments, philosophical papers, policy debates, teaching

Tools: Rationale, Argunet, MindMup

Framework 5: Principle of Charity

Overview: Interpret arguments in strongest, most reasonable form.

Guidelines:

  1. Assume rationality: Interpret to avoid obvious errors
  2. Fill in gaps: Supply missing premises if reasonable
  3. Disambiguate: Choose most charitable interpretation of ambiguous claims
  4. Focus on strongest version: Address best form of opponent's argument
  5. Avoid straw-manning: Don't misrepresent to make refutation easier

Rationale:

  • Productive dialogue requires understanding opponent's actual view
  • Defeating weak version doesn't show position flawed
  • Charity facilitates learning from disagreement
  • Intellectual honesty demands fairness

When to Use: Argument evaluation, philosophical dialogue, teaching, debates


Methodologies (Expandable)

Methodology 1: Analytic Philosophy Approach

Description: Emphasis on logical rigor, conceptual clarity, and argument analysis.

Characteristics:

  • Logical analysis of language and concepts
  • Formal methods when applicable (logic, probability)
  • Piecemeal problem-solving rather than system-building
  • Engagement with science and mathematics
  • Clarity and precision in expression

Representative Figures: Russell, Wittgenstein, Quine, Kripke, Lewis

When to Apply: Conceptual analysis, logic problems, philosophy of science, epistemology

Methodology 2: Continental Philosophy Approach

Description: Focus on human experience, existence, interpretation, and historical context.

Characteristics:

  • Phenomenology: Study of structures of experience
  • Hermeneutics: Theory of interpretation
  • Historical consciousness and tradition
  • Existential and ethical concerns foregrounded
  • Literary and interpretive styles

Representative Figures: Heidegger, Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, Gadamer, Foucault, Derrida

When to Apply: Questions of meaning, existence, interpretation, human condition, social critique

Methodology 3: Pragmatism

Description: Evaluate beliefs and concepts by practical consequences and utility.

Core Ideas:

  • Truth is what works
  • Meaning is tied to practical consequences
  • Inquiry is continuous process, not search for certainty
  • Anti-foundationalism: No fixed foundations of knowledge
  • Fallibilism: All beliefs revisable in light of experience

Representative Figures: Peirce, James, Dewey, Quine, Rorty

When to Apply: Evaluating theories instrumentally, practical reasoning, rejecting dogmatism

Methodology 4: Eastern Philosophical Traditions

Description: Non-Western approaches emphasizing practice, non-dualism, liberation.

Traditions:

  • Buddhism: No-self (anātman), emptiness (śūnyatā), dependent origination, suffering and its cessation
  • Taoism: Dao (Way), wu wei (effortless action), naturalism, complementary opposites
  • Confucianism: Virtue cultivation, social harmony, ritual propriety (li), humaneness (ren)
  • Vedanta: Brahman (ultimate reality), Atman (self), non-dualism, liberation (moksha)

Key Differences from Western Philosophy:

  • Practice-oriented (meditation, cultivation)
  • Holistic and non-dualistic thinking
  • Less emphasis on logical argument, more on experience and wisdom
  • Integration of philosophy and spirituality

When to Apply: Comparative philosophy, consciousness studies, ethics, meaning questions

Methodology 5: Phenomenology

Description: Study phenomena as they appear to consciousness.

Process:

  1. Epoché (bracketing): Suspend judgments about external reality
  2. Phenomenological reduction: Focus on structures of experience itself
  3. Eidetic variation: Imaginatively vary features to identify essences
  4. Intentionality analysis: Examine directedness of consciousness toward objects
  5. Lifeworld description: Describe pre-theoretical lived experience

Applications: Consciousness, perception, embodiment, intersubjectivity

Founding Thinker: Edmund Husserl (1859-1938)


Detailed Examples (Expandable)

Example 1: Gettier Problem and Analysis of Knowledge

Problem: Is justified true belief sufficient for knowledge?

Philosophical Analysis:

Classical Definition (Plato): S knows that p if and only if:

  1. p is true
  2. S believes that p
  3. S is justified in believing that p

Gettier Counterexample (1963): Smith and Jones have applied for the same job. Smith has strong evidence for: (e) Jones will get the job, and Jones has 10 coins in his pocket

From (e), Smith infers: (f) The man who will get the job has 10 coins in his pocket

Smith's reasoning seems justified. Suppose:

  • (f) is true
  • Smith believes (f)
  • Smith is justified in believing (f)

But: Smith actually gets the job, and Smith has 10 coins in his pocket (coincidentally).

Analysis:

  • Smith has justified true belief that (f)
  • But intuitively, Smith doesn't know (f)
  • Justification based on false belief (e)
  • Conclusion: JTB is insufficient for knowledge

Philosophical Responses:

1. No False Lemmas Condition:

  • Add: Justification must not essentially rely on false beliefs
  • Problem: Artificial? What counts as "essential"?

2. Reliabilism:

  • Knowledge = true belief formed by reliable process
  • Smith's belief not from reliable process (true by luck)
  • Problem: Undermines role of justification?

3. Virtue Epistemology:

  • Knowledge = true belief from intellectual virtues
  • Smith's belief not from virtue (lucky guess based on false assumption)

4. Safety Condition:

  • Belief must be safe: couldn't easily have been false in nearby possible worlds
  • Smith's belief not safe (Jones nearly got job)

5. Sensitivity Condition:

  • If p were false, S wouldn't believe p
  • Smith's belief not sensitive (would still believe based on false e)

Key Insight: Gettier cases show knowledge requires more than JTB. Exact requirement remains debated 60+ years later. Illustrates how single counterexample can overturn centuries-old philosophical consensus.

Sources:

Example 2: Chinese Room Argument and Strong AI

Question: Can computers understand language or just manipulate symbols?

Philosophical Analysis:

Searle's Thought Experiment (1980):

  • Imagine person in room with Chinese symbols
  • Person has rulebook (in English) for manipulating symbols
  • Chinese speakers outside pass questions (symbols) into room
  • Person follows rules to produce output symbols (answers)
  • To Chinese speakers, room appears to understand Chinese
  • But person inside doesn't understand Chinese, just follows rules

Argument:

  1. Person in room doesn't understand Chinese (just follows syntax rules)
  2. Person implements computer program
  3. Therefore, implementing program doesn't produce understanding
  4. Strong AI claims digital computers can literally understand
  5. Therefore, Strong AI is false

Replies and Counter-Replies:

Systems Reply:

  • Individual doesn't understand, but system (person + rulebook + room) does
  • Searle: Internalize rules; person still doesn't understand

Robot Reply:

  • Add sensory input and motor output (embodied cognition)
  • Searle: Add perceptual rules; still just symbol manipulation

Brain Simulator Reply:

  • Simulate brain's causal structure at neuron level
  • Searle: Still formal manipulation; intrinsic intentionality missing

Other Minds Reply:

  • Same skepticism applies to other humans
  • We infer understanding from behavior
  • Searle: Humans have right causal powers (biological); computers don't

Connectionists:

  • Brain doesn't follow rules like symbolic AI
  • Neural networks are different
  • Searle: Still formal operations; substrate irrelevant to argument

Philosophical Issues:

Syntax vs. Semantics:

  • Computation is syntactic (form-based)
  • Understanding requires semantics (meaning)
  • Syntax alone insufficient for semantics

Intentionality:

  • Mental states have intentionality (aboutness)
  • Derived intentionality (words, computers) vs. intrinsic (minds)
  • Can derived intentionality become intrinsic?

Functionalism Challenge:

  • Functionalism: Mental states defined by causal roles
  • Chinese Room challenges: Same functional organization, no understanding
  • Blocks functionalism as sufficient for mentality

Implications:

  • For AI: Computation alone may be insufficient for genuine intelligence
  • For Cognitive Science: Challenges computational theory of mind
  • For Consciousness: Suggests consciousness requires more than information processing
  • For Philosophy of Mind: Functionalism may be inadequate

Counter-Perspective:

  • Searle's intuition may be wrong
  • Understanding is gradual, not all-or-nothing
  • System as whole may understand even if components don't
  • Biological chauvinism: Why must understanding be biological?

Key Insight: Chinese Room argument challenges the computational theory of mind by arguing that syntax (form) is insufficient for semantics (meaning). Whether Searle's intuition is correct remains deeply contested, but argument has profoundly influenced philosophy of mind and AI.

Sources:

Example 3: Personal Identity and the Ship of Theseus

Question: What makes a person the same person over time despite physical and psychological changes?

Philosophical Analysis:

Ship of Theseus Paradox:

  • Theseus's ship gradually has all planks replaced
  • After complete replacement, is it the same ship?
  • Suppose original planks reassembled into ship
  • Which ship is Theseus's ship?

Application to Personal Identity:

  • Bodies' atoms completely replaced over 7-10 years
  • Memories, beliefs, personality change
  • What makes you the same person you were 20 years ago?

Competing Theories:

1. Bodily Continuity Theory:

  • You are same person if same living body
  • Problems: Gradual replacement of cells; brain transplant cases
  • Modified: Continuity of brain (or specific brain regions)

2. Psychological Continuity Theory (Locke):

  • You are same person if psychological continuity (memories, personality, beliefs)
  • Chain of overlapping memories and character traits
  • Problems: Memory loss (Alzheimer's), split brain cases

3. Narrative Self Theory:

  • Personal identity constructed through life narrative
  • You are the story you tell about yourself
  • Problems: False memories, revisionist histories

4. No-Self Theory (Buddhist, Hume):

  • No enduring self; just bundle of perceptions
  • Personal identity is convenient fiction
  • Problems: Practical necessity of identity; first-person perspective

Thought Experiments:

Brain Transplant:

  • Your brain transplanted into another body
  • Where are "you"? In original body (now vegetative) or new body with your brain?
  • Most: You go with brain (psychological continuity)

Split Brain:

  • Brain divided, each half transplanted into body
  • Two people now have your psychology
  • Which is you? Both? Neither?
  • Challenges psychological criterion (branching problem)

Teletransportation (Parfit):

  • Device scans your body, destroys it, recreates exact copy on Mars
  • Is person on Mars you, or just a replica?
  • Continuity or identity?

Fission Case:

  • You divide into two people with your psychology
  • Psychological continuity without identity (can't be identical to two distinct people)
  • Conclusion: Continuity matters more than identity

Parfit's View:

  • Personal identity not what matters
  • Psychological continuity and connectedness matter
  • Survival admits degrees
  • Identity doesn't

Implications:

  • Ethics: If no enduring self, how understand moral responsibility?
  • Prudential: Should I care about my future self? (If psychological continuity weak)
  • Death: Is death extinction or transformation?
  • Cryonics: If revived centuries later, would be "you"?
  • Mind Uploading: Would digital copy be you or copy?

Key Insight: Personal identity puzzles reveal that our commonsense notion of self may not map onto clear metaphysical fact. We may need to reconceptualize identity, or accept that questions like "Is this the same person?" lack determinate answers in all cases.

Sources:


Analysis Process

When using the philosopher-analyst skill, follow this systematic 10-step process:

Step 1: Clarify the Question

  • What exactly is being asked?
  • Is this empirical question or conceptual/normative?
  • What ambiguities need resolving?

Step 2: Define Key Terms

  • What do central concepts mean?
  • Are terms being used consistently?
  • Do definitions beg the question?

Step 3: Identify Assumptions

  • What is being taken for granted?
  • Are assumptions justified?
  • What happens if assumptions rejected?

Step 4: Reconstruct Arguments

  • What are premises and conclusions?
  • Are there hidden premises?
  • Is argument deductive or inductive?

Step 5: Evaluate Validity

  • Do conclusions follow from premises?
  • Identify logical form
  • Check for formal fallacies

Step 6: Evaluate Soundness

  • Are premises true?
  • What evidence supports them?
  • Are there counterexamples?

Step 7: Consider Objections

  • What would critics say?
  • Strongest counterarguments?
  • Are objections decisive?

Step 8: Apply Philosophical Frameworks

  • What do different traditions say?
  • Analytic, continental, Eastern perspectives?
  • Historical context?

Step 9: Explore Implications

  • What follows if position accepted?
  • Consistency with other beliefs?
  • Practical consequences?

Step 10: Reach Reflective Equilibrium

  • Adjust beliefs and principles for coherence
  • Acknowledge uncertainties
  • State position with appropriate confidence

Quality Standards

A thorough philosophical analysis includes:

Conceptual clarity: Key terms precisely defined ✓ Logical rigor: Arguments valid, fallacies identified ✓ Explicit assumptions: Hidden premises made visible ✓ Charitable interpretation: Strongest form of positions considered ✓ Multiple perspectives: Different philosophical traditions engaged ✓ Counterarguments addressed: Objections taken seriously ✓ Implications explored: Logical consequences traced ✓ Appropriate modesty: Limits of knowledge acknowledged ✓ Clear communication: Accessible to non-specialists where possible ✓ Intellectual honesty: Following arguments where they lead


Key Resources

General Philosophy

Logic

History of Philosophy

Contemporary Philosophy

Professional Organizations

Journals

  • Mind, Journal of Philosophy, Philosophical Review, Nous (top-tier)
  • Philosophy and Public Affairs (applied ethics, political philosophy)
  • Philosophy of Science (philosophy of science)

Integration with Amplihack Principles

Ruthless Simplicity

  • Occam's Razor: Prefer simpler explanations
  • Avoid unnecessary metaphysical commitments
  • Clear, jargon-free expression

Evidence-Based Practice

  • Logical evidence (validity, coherence)
  • Empirical constraints on philosophical theories
  • Test theories against cases and intuitions

Modular Design

  • Isolate questions for separate analysis
  • Connect insights across philosophical domains
  • Build comprehensive view from parts

Version

Current Version: 1.0.0 Status: Production Ready Last Updated: 2025-11-16