What is it about?
This article offers an overview of philosophical methodologies. In an attempt to avoid a certain circularity, the article itself tries to avoid consciously or solely deploying and engaging with any current standard notion of what constitutes a philosophical method or philosophy itself. It hopes to find some of the possible places in which philosophy occurs, and this turns out to include (at least) such endeavours as literature, art, poetry, and linguistics. From here it considers how almost anything—for example, conversation, everyday life, and love—can also be philosophy. An attempt is made to identify some characteristic feature of philosophy as it occurs in all such forms. In the end, the simultaneous enacting of a peculiar optimism and particular humility both, in the search for knowledge, is put forward as potentially sufficient to at least begin to identify philosophy across its many guises.
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Why is it important?
Philosophy is a field with its own set of standards, tools and methodologies. And yet, as philosophers we can develop a too narrow view of what can and does constitute philosophy, This article hopes to remind philosophers and would-be philosophers that there is more to philosophy than what falls within the traditionally conceived boundaries of the field.
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This page is a summary of: Myriad Philosophical Methodologies, Metaphilosophy, October 2016, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1111/meta.12213.
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