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The Dimensional Philosopher's Toolkit: Or, the Essential Criticism; The Dimensional Encyclopedia, First Volume

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---Not a prolegomena, a foundation.--- More descriptive than a manifesto, and deeply pioneering in its formality, this manual uses a diagrammatic method to express new theories and foundations in thought. In place of circular reasoning, it offers recursive proofs; in place of insolvability, it offers exclusive contexts; in place of linguistic deconstruction, it offers categorical deductions. It includes over three-hundred pages of interrelated methods, arguments, and tools, which promise to assist the philosopher in making logical, ethical, and systematic claims. This first published volume of the dimensional encyclopedia is something more than an encyclopedia. It's a guide to genuine philosophy.

328 pages, Kindle Edition

First published December 31, 2012

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Nathan Coppedge

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Nathan Coppedge.
71 reviews2 followers
April 2, 2013
This is genuine philosophy. I wrote it.

Coherent knowledge techniques using a diagrammatic method.

It makes Wittgenstein look nihilistic, and it makes Nietzsche look purposeless. It also provides a standard for re-interpreting how little Alfred Whitehead did with process philosophy.

Not metaphysics, but it does more with metaphysics than most works of philosophy have dreamed of.

Applies to theories of information, absolute knowledge, redefines syllogistic reasoning, and provides some good arguments for the partial failure of some traditional assumptions.

Overall, the best book of philosophy ever written (according to me).

Nietzsche is a better novelist, God is a better coherentist, but darn it this bucks the tradition. For a change someone (has) done something.
Profile Image for Nathan Coppedge.
71 reviews2 followers
May 4, 2014
One of the best books on coherent philosophy.

"Future thinkers may look back at your book as a work which was way ahead of its time" ---T. Bynum, distinguished professor at SCSU.

"[Y]our work looks fascinating and profound" ---Simon Boylan, Masters in Philosophy.
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