Philosopher’s Glossary

Philosophers Master

Philosophers Master

Field Everything Else
CORE IDENTITY FIELDS
[Full Name]

Definition: Most widely accepted standardized English name used in academic literature.

How to research:

  • Use primary reference hierarchy: Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (SEP) → Britannica → academic texts.
  • Choose the most cited form, not the longest or most “complete.”

Avoid:

  • Mixing transliterations (e.g., multiple Chinese systems)
  • Adding titles (Dr., Saint, etc.)
[Native Name]

Definition: Name in original language/script (Greek, Latin, Chinese characters, Arabic, etc.).

How to research:

  • Use native script where possible (e.g., 孔子 for Confucius)
  • If original script unavailable, use historically closest reconstruction

Avoid: Transliteration duplicates of Full Name

[Other Names]

Definition: All historically attested variants: Latinized, Anglicized, aliases, titles.

How to research:

Pull from:

  • Academic encyclopedias
  • Historical texts

Include:

  • Latin forms (e.g., Renatus Cartesius)
  • Honorifics (e.g., “Doctor Angelicus” for Aquinas)

Avoid: Redundant spelling variations unless historically meaningful

[Year Born] / [Year Died]

Definition: Best scholarly estimate of birth and death year.

How to research:

Prefer:

  • Primary scholarship consensus

Use approximate indicators when needed:

  • “c.” → convert to best integer estimate
  • If uncertain → use NULL or midpoint estimate

Avoid: Fake precision for ancient figures

[Sex]

Definition: Biological sex as historically recorded.

How to research: Historical records / scholarly consensus

Avoid: Modern reinterpretation unless explicitly supported

[Nationality]

Definition: Civilizational or cultural identity, not modern passport status.

How to research:

Map to:

  • “Ancient Greek”
  • “Roman”
  • “Chinese (Zhou Dynasty)”
  • Then optionally normalize

Avoid: Assigning modern nation-states directly (e.g., calling Socrates “Greek (Greece)” without context)

[Religion]

Definition: Declared or inferred religious/philosophical alignment.

How to research:

Use:

  • Self-identification (if available)
  • Doctrinal alignment (e.g., Christian, Daoist, Atheist)

Avoid: Over-precision (e.g., micro-denominations unless critical)

[Mother] / [Father]

Definition: Known biological parents.

How to research:

  • Only include if historically documented
  • Use primary biographies

Avoid: Guessing or mythological insertions unless clearly labeled

[Birthplace]

Definition: City/region at time of birth.

How to research: Use historical place name first

Avoid: Replacing with modern name

[Modern Country Name]

Definition: Current geopolitical country corresponding to birthplace.

How to research: Map birthplace → modern borders

Avoid: Historical naming here (this field is explicitly modern)

INTELLECTUAL NETWORK FIELDS
[Influence 1–5]

Definition: Philosophers or thinkers who materially shaped this philosopher’s thought.

How to research:

Look for:

  • Explicit citations
  • Known teacher–student relationships
  • Doctrinal inheritance

Priority order:

  • Direct teachers
  • Explicitly cited thinkers
  • Major tradition influences

Avoid:

  • Generic influences (“Greek culture”)
  • Overfilling with weak connections
[Follower 1–5]

Definition: Philosophers directly influenced by this philosopher.

How to research:

Use:

  • Schools (e.g., Aristotelians)
  • Named disciples
  • Major intellectual descendants

Avoid:

  • Listing entire movements
  • Weak or indirect influence chains
DISCIPLINARY CONTRIBUTION FIELDS
Global rule for all “Contributions to X”

Each field should answer:

“What did this philosopher introduce, redefine, or fundamentally advance in this domain?”

NOT biography. NOT vague praise.

[Contributions to Metaphysics]

Scope: Nature of reality, being, existence, substance.

Look for:

  • Ontology systems (e.g., Aristotle’s substance theory)
  • Dualism / monism
  • Being vs becoming

Avoid: Ethical or epistemic spillover

[Contributions to Epistemology]

Scope: Knowledge, belief, justification, certainty.

Look for:

  • Skepticism
  • Rationalism vs empiricism
  • Theory of knowledge limits
[Contributions to Logic]

Scope: Formal reasoning systems.

Look for:

  • Syllogistic logic
  • Symbolic logic
  • Language–logic relationships

Avoid: General “clear thinking” claims

[Contributions to Ethics (Moral Philosophy)]

Scope: Right/wrong, virtue, moral systems.

Look for:

  • Virtue ethics (Aristotle)
  • Deontology (Kant)
  • Utilitarian precursors
[Contributions to Aesthetics]

Scope: Beauty, art, taste, perception of form.

Look for:

  • Theories of art
  • Beauty as form, harmony, or perception

Note: Many philosophers will be NULL here

[Contributions to Political Philosophy]

Scope: State, governance, justice, rights.

Look for:

  • Ideal state models (Plato)
  • Social contract (Locke)
  • Power structures (Marx)
[Contributions to Philosophy of Mind]

Scope: Consciousness, self, mind-body relation.

Look for:

  • Dualism (Descartes)
  • Phenomenology (Husserl/Heidegger lineage)
[Contributions to Philosophy of Language]

Scope: Meaning, reference, language structure.

Look for:

  • Wittgenstein-style analysis
  • Naming, meaning, syntax theories
[Contributions to Philosophy of Science]

Scope: Scientific method, knowledge structure of science.

Look for:

  • Empiricism foundations
  • Scientific reasoning frameworks
[Contributions to Philosophy of Religion]

Scope: God, faith, theology, religious reasoning.

Look for:

  • Arguments for existence of God
  • Faith vs reason frameworks
EXECUTION RULES (CRITICAL)
No filler text

Every contribution must be specific and identifiable.

Use sentence fragments, not essays

This is a database, not a paper.

Max density per field

Aim for 2–5 tightly written lines per contribution field.

NULL is valid

If no real contribution exists, leave it empty.

Consistency > completeness

Every philosopher should be evaluated with the same standard.