Getting on to Logic (the Logos)
Jul 16, 2022 7:45:26 GMT -8
Post by The Ninevite on Jul 16, 2022 7:45:26 GMT -8
What do we get on to logic with? The Dewey Decimal system is an alphanumerical code beginning with the number 100. Fo everyone who ever wondered how high the numbers go, prior to letters being introduced into the system in the library, the answer is 100. The first subject heading for the alphanumerical system is "knowledge". This includes histories of the book, modern expressions or statistical tables or infographics, number theory, and computer programming at the King County Library. The section from 100 to 150 also includes books on the collection of museum artifacts, coding as well as modern electronic programing, number theory and oddly enough, conspiracy theories.
That's the first half century of Dewey Decimal logic. what is needed to get on to it is the idea of one hundred, and the filing system is broken up into centuries. One important fact about ontology is that there's really nothing that exists prior to logic. It might take you eighteen or twenty-two years to finish learning logic and its natural antecedents, but logic itself has always existed. Ancient ontological philosophy holds that logic preexists creation, because logic exists in the mind of God. Because logic preexists creation, it preexists natural physics, and other natural sciences. This is of essence to the design of experiments, as addressed in the Nuremburg Code.
The ancient Milesians, believing that logic preexisted the world in the mind of God, held that nature itself abides by sober logic, and that the procession of the equinoxes, which makes it appear that the stars move in the night sky, could be understood by means of thought and observation. In Thales' day, it was known that the zodiac band seemed askew, and was noted that regular orbits in the night sky were not perfectly spherical, could appear helical so that a long-term astronomer wondered why the Moon, stars, and planets didn't eventually disappear from view permanently, or why the celestial bodies did not collide. This question was not a non sequitur, apropos of nothing; it was known to Thales that there had been a worldwide flood.
That's the first half century of Dewey Decimal logic. what is needed to get on to it is the idea of one hundred, and the filing system is broken up into centuries. One important fact about ontology is that there's really nothing that exists prior to logic. It might take you eighteen or twenty-two years to finish learning logic and its natural antecedents, but logic itself has always existed. Ancient ontological philosophy holds that logic preexists creation, because logic exists in the mind of God. Because logic preexists creation, it preexists natural physics, and other natural sciences. This is of essence to the design of experiments, as addressed in the Nuremburg Code.
The ancient Milesians, believing that logic preexisted the world in the mind of God, held that nature itself abides by sober logic, and that the procession of the equinoxes, which makes it appear that the stars move in the night sky, could be understood by means of thought and observation. In Thales' day, it was known that the zodiac band seemed askew, and was noted that regular orbits in the night sky were not perfectly spherical, could appear helical so that a long-term astronomer wondered why the Moon, stars, and planets didn't eventually disappear from view permanently, or why the celestial bodies did not collide. This question was not a non sequitur, apropos of nothing; it was known to Thales that there had been a worldwide flood.