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philosophical methodology : ウィキペディア英語版
philosophical methodology

Philosophical method (or philosophical methodology) is the study of how to do philosophy. A common view among philosophers is that philosophy is distinguished by the ways that philosophers follow in addressing philosophical questions. There is not just one method that philosophers use to answer philosophical questions.
==Methodology process==
Systematic philosophy is a generic term that applies to philosophical methods and approaches that attempt to provide a framework in reason that can explain all questions and problems related to human life. Examples of systematic philosophers include Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Spinoza, and Hegel. In a meaningful sense, all of western philosophy from Plato to the modern schools of theoretical metaphysics. In many ways, any attempts to formulate a philosophical method that provides the ultimate constituents of reality, a metaphysics, can be considered systematic philosophy. In modern philosophy the reaction to systematic philosophy began with Kierkegaard and continued in various forms through analytic philosophy, existentialism, hermeneutics, and deconstructionism.〔(The Ammonius Foundation )〕
Some common features of the methods that philosophers follow (and discuss when discussing philosophical method) include:
*Methodic doubt - a systematic process of being skeptical about (or doubting) the truth of one's beliefs.
*Argument - provide an argument or several arguments supporting the solution.
*Dialectic - present the solution and arguments for criticism by other philosophers, and help them judge their own.

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