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Blog Posts (358)
- 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
Post not marked as liked 1 The Happy Selfie Fallacy -- And Social Media Directory 0 comments 0 Post not Post not marked as liked 11 The Newcomer's Fallacy -- The Problem With Those New to Philosophy 3 comments Post not marked as liked 23 The Drug Lords Fallacy -- The Philosophy of Moritz Zimmerman's Redemption -- Why We Need to Work On Ourselves Over Getting Power Fallacies 0 comments 0 8 likes. Post not marked as liked 7 The Degree Fallacy -- A Critique Towards Exclusivity Society 0 comments 0
- 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