Metaphilosophy is the philosophy of philosophy, which is to say the philosophical examination of philosophy itself. It is the study of questions about the definition of philosophy and its demarcation from other fields; whether and how progress is made in philosophy; how philosophy is to be done; what it takes to do philosophy; who is to do philosophy; and why it matters to do philosophy. — The Metaphilosophy of Analytic Pragmatism
Since when is social science a physical science? — jgill
And your division of mathematics is naive. — jgill
It’s an adaptation of the Quadrivium’s . . . — Pfhorrest
"A medieval university curriculum involving the “mathematical arts” of arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and music." (Wiki) — jgill
In modern applications of the liberal arts as curriculum in colleges or universities, the quadrivium may be considered to be the study of number and its relationship to space or time: arithmetic was pure number, geometry was number in space, music was number in time, and astronomy was number in space and time. [...] The term continues to be used by the Classical education movement [...] — Wiki on Quadrivium, modern usage section
Generally, social science is not considered a physical science. Look it up. — jgill
And your diagram accords philosophy an enviable position among virtually all human activities. At a time in the past that might have had merit, but I don't see it these days. Sorry, but it seems conceited and way out of proportion. — jgill
And the mathematical world now is far too complicated to be encapsulated so trivially in your diagram. — jgill
This isn't a diagram of how much emphasis any particular human society contingently puts on the different subjects, but of the inherent relationships between the different subjects — Pfhorrest
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