In everyday language, mental health has become a catch-all for everything that hurts inside. Depression, anxiety, burnout, even heartbreak all get bundled under the phrase “mental illness.” But that phrase is misleading. It hides an important truth: thinking can be healthy while feeling is sick. We need two categories, not one. Mental illness and emotional … Continue reading Mental Illness is NOT Emotional Illness – Here’s the Difference
Tag: logic
Existence Is NOT Suffering: The Truth About Life
Introduction For thousands of years, many traditions—especially within certain spiritual and religious systems—have claimed that existence is inherently suffering. This idea, often repeated in slogans such as “Life is pain” or “Existence is suffering”, has shaped countless minds and lives, becoming a cornerstone of some philosophies and spiritual practices. But is it actually true? This … Continue reading Existence Is NOT Suffering: The Truth About Life
Do not deny the sun.
A very important rule for epistemology. Truth will never actually contradict basically observable reality. So if your logic seems to contradict it, it means your logic is incorrect.
My Epistemology – How to Find and Investigate Truth
🧱 There Are Only Two Ultimate Kinds of Proof 1. Observation (Empirical or Phenomenological) Direct experience—either of the external world (empirical) or of consciousness itself (phenomenological).No matter how subtle or internal, it’s still a form of seeing. Examples: “I see plants growing toward light” → physical observation “I feel desire pulling me toward comfort” → … Continue reading My Epistemology – How to Find and Investigate Truth
How to do philosophy
Real philosophy is systematic. Build solid arguments which start with foundations of reality. Follow the truth based on logical necessity to wherever it leads. Then try destroy what youve built to test if it's really true or not. Let go of what gets destroyed, keep what remains. This is also why there are many fake … Continue reading How to do philosophy
A Descent into the Abyss to Find the Truth about Meaning and Freewill (And I Found The Answer, Thankfully)
Short version: A Descent into the Abyss to Find the Truth about Meaning and Freewill Introduction This essay is a comprehensive and structured documentation of a philosophical investigation undertaken from a strictly rational, logical foundation. The goal was to examine whether life is meaningful and whether free will exists, without assuming either as a given. … Continue reading A Descent into the Abyss to Find the Truth about Meaning and Freewill (And I Found The Answer, Thankfully)
30 Universal Questions to Examine Any Philosophical Claim or Model
These are to be used not just for the self—but for all metaphysical, epistemological, moral, or ontological claims.