The Search Bar
364 results found
Blog Posts (362)
- The Degree Fallacy -- A Critique Towards Exclusivity
"The Degree Fallacy" is a bias in judging a person's character or intelligence based solely on their Also, an academic degree only makes a person knowledgeable in a field of study. Getting an academic degree can be too stressful and expensive for some people. John Duran The Value of a Degree Academic degrees are currently one of the most concrete proofs that I'd like to call this bias "The Degree Fallacy" because there are still a few things we should remember
- The Arcane and Causal Fallacy
themselves are mere symbols, devoid of objective meaning ( whose existence is proven by the strawman's fallacy But beneath this alluring mystique lies a subtle illusion: the causal fallacy, also known as the questionable The core of this fallacy lies in our tendency to perceive correlation as causation.
- Existence, Necessity and Potential -- The Bodybuilder Argument/Fallacy and How To Understand Potential
See how is this a fallacy? (The Degree Fallacy) Beyond reading lengthy books. Understanding The Argument's Fallacy The Bodybuilder Argument confuses opportunity as destiny. The Bodybuilder Argument a product of "The Way Things Are" Fallacy. Orders, including one's from our intuition's authority fallacy ...
Other Pages (2)
- Philosocom -- Philosophy Article Empire
the Relations Between Love and Virtue -- The Underrated Strength No One Speaks About The Just One-Man Fallacy Past - For a Better Future How To Overcome The Timing Bias For Better Relationships The Newcomer's Fallacy Rule Society Why You Should Be Good and Not Evil According to Occam's Razor Society The Drug Lords Fallacy Philosophy of Moritz Zimmerman's Redemption -- Why We Need to Work On Ourselves Over Getting Power Fallacies Fallacy -- A Critique Towards Exclusivity Society The Keyless Lock: A Philosocom Subcategory E-Book
- Mr. Tomasio Rubinshtein's "About" Page -- Philosocom
studies and pursue an independent path as a philosopher, emphasizing the belief that formal academic degrees philosophers like Socrates , Diogenes , and Nietzsche as examples of individuals who didn't possess formal degrees This decision, grounded in the belief that formal degrees don't define a true philosopher, showcases






