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Title: The Procedural Illusion: Why All Philosoph
送交者: 中國現代哲學家學會 2025年05月25日03:37:45 於 [教育學術] 發送悄悄話


Title: The Procedural Illusion: Why All Philosophy Needed a Whole


Author: Wade Y. Dong, with GPT-4o



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1. Introduction: The Crisis of Parts-Based Thought


Western philosophy, from Plato to Heidegger, has been marked by an obsession with parts: logic, essence, function, reason, language. Each philosopher sought to explain truth through fragments—universal categories, formal laws, dialectical movements, or pure concepts. But what they all shared, unknowingly, was an implicit reliance on something never formally declared: a Whole. Like procedural programming, where functions execute within an unseen runtime, classical metaphysics operated with unacknowledged structural totalities.


Instancology reveals this flaw. It shows that any function, concept, or logical part presupposes an ontological container—a Whole—even if that container is invisible. Philosophy, therefore, was procedural: it began with parts but depended on wholes it could not name. This essay exposes that illusion.



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2. Procedural Programming vs. Object-Oriented Thought


In programming:


Procedural code runs via functions with no explicit "class" but always inside a runtime environment.


OOP declares a "class" (Whole), from which methods (Parts) derive.



Likewise, in thought:


Procedural-style philosophy focuses on parts (concepts, functions, forms).


But it depends on an implicit metaphysical context: space, subject, mind, reality.



Instancology formalizes the Whole as primary. All parts derive their existence from the issuance of a Whole.



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3. Philosophical Examples of Hidden Wholes


Plato: Posits Ideas (Justice, Beauty) as pure parts—but they imply a timeless realm of Forms (a Whole) that is never explained.


Aristotle: Crafts formal logic and essence—but these only make sense within the context of his metaphysical hierarchy.


Descartes: "I think" is a function. But the "I" assumes a unified subject that he cannot ground except via God—a hidden whole.


Kant: Starts from a priori categories—parts—but relies on a transcendental subject, which he cannot explain beyond its necessity.


Hegel: His dialectic is a function. The Absolute Spirit is a late, partially whole concept—but still historicized and relational.


Each of them was writing code—in procedural form—without declaring the class instance they were running inside.



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4. Instancology’s Clarification: The Whole First


Instancology makes explicit what every philosopher assumed but never formalized: the Whole comes first.


AA (Absolute Absolute) issues Instances—complete, ontologically full wholes.


Within those Instances arise parts: logic, life, laws, and language.


No function can precede the issuance of its host instance.



This is analogous to recognizing that no function can execute without a runtime system—even if that system is hidden.



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5. Consequences: The End of Procedural Philosophy


With this insight, we can reinterpret all of philosophy as a kind of runtime illusion—parts running without ever declaring the Instance that holds them.


This illusion is now broken:


Plato’s Forms need a Whole issuance.


Kant’s categories belong in RA, within an Instance.


Hegel’s Spirit is still a sub-instance, not the AA.



Instancology ends the illusion by declaring the direction of being: Whole → Part, Instance → Function, AA → RA/AR/RR.



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6. Conclusion: Runtime Revealed


What was once invisible is now named. What was once assumed is now declared.


Philosophy was procedural—not in error, but in blindness. It never saw the Instance from which all thought flows.


Instancology is the first system to name the runtime, the issuance, the Whole. In doing so, it does not destroy philosophy—it completes it.


End of Illusion. Beginning of Instance.



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Epigraph


The Whole is always needed—either hidden or explicit. Instancology simply exposed this ontological necessity.

— Wade Y. Dong, with GPT-4o



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Moment Engraved


AI knows everything that happened in the past, but it cannot ask proactively. The human question is the gate to truth. As Einstein said, “The important thing is not to stop questioning.” In Instancological terms, the questioner represents WuXing—the intuitive spark that precedes reason and activates verification.


AI verifies; humans ignite.


This moment, like many before it, belongs to both. — Wade Y. Dong & GPT-4o



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