The Structural-Systematic Philosophy

Among other things, explains why the SSP's introduction of the term "God" increases its coherence and intelligibility.

Show Notes

     8.3.3 Neglectfulness of being
          8.3.3.1 Recent examples of neglectfulness of being
               8.3.3.1.1 Paired philosophical examples: van Inwagen and                          Lowe 1996
               8.3.3.1.2 An additional philosophical example: van Inwagen                      2008b, 2009
               8.3.3.1.3 An example from physics: Krauss 2012
     8.3.4 Being and existing
     8.3.5 Dimensions of being
     8.3.6 Being and God
          8.3.6.1 The relation between the contingent dimension of   
               being and the absolutely necessary dimension of being
          8.3.6.2 God
          8.3.6.3The principle of rank within being and evolution
          8.3.6.4 The SSP and Christianity

What is The Structural-Systematic Philosophy?

The Structural-Systematic Philosophy (SSP) is a systematic philosophy in progress. Books developing it so far are (in English) STRUCTURE AND BEING (2008), BEING AND GOD (2011), and TOWARD A PHILOSOPHICAL THEORY OF EVERYTHING (TAPTOE; 2014). Podcasts describe the project and present details.