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The ultimate model, adding the final dimensions of value, purpose, and the ultimate. Building on the 12 Axes, we add: Axis 13: Fact-Value (reality includes value or value is projected). Axis 14: Purpose-Mechanism (reality has telos vs. blind mechanism). Axis 15: Finite-Infinite (reality is bounded vs. unbounded in space/time/substance). Axis 16: Personal-Impersonal (ultimate reality is personal (God) vs. impersonal (Brahman, the One)). These sixteen axes generate 65,536 potential positions—enough to capture every metaphysical system ever conceived. The 16 Axes of the Spectrum of Metaphysics reveal that metaphysics is the art of choosing positions on sixteen fundamental questions. Every philosopher, every religion, every worldview makes choices on these axes—consciously or not. The 16 Axes don't tell you which metaphysics is true—they give you a language for understanding what any metaphysics actually claims, what it entails, and how it compares to others. They are the periodic table of metaphysical elements—the fundamental dimensions that combine to create every possible worldview.
The 16 Axes of the Spectrum of Metaphysics "You want to know if God exists. The 16 Axes ask: which God? Personal or impersonal? Finite or infinite? Purposeful or beyond purpose? Grounded or grounding? Necessary or contingent? Eternal or temporal? Causal or acausal? Value-laden or beyond value? Sixteen questions, and until you answer them, 'God' is just a word. The axes don't tell you whether to believe—they tell you what you'd be believing in. And that's the only question that matters."

Materialist atheism chooses material, pluralist, realist, atomist, eternal, contingent, causal, brutal, nominalist, actualist, endurantist, presentist (or eternalist depending), fact (no intrinsic value), mechanism, finite, impersonal. Advaita Vedanta chooses ideal, monist, realist, holist, eternal, necessary, acausal (in ultimate), grounded (in Brahman), realist about universals (as Brahman's aspects), possibilist (all possibilities in Brahman), endurantist (Brahman timeless), eternalist, value (Brahman is bliss), purpose (lila), infinite, impersonal (or transpersonal).
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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A foundational model for understanding philosophical systems along two fundamental dimensions. The first axis runs from Analytic Philosophy (emphasis on logic, language, clarity, argument—philosophy as problem-solving) to Continental Philosophy (emphasis on history, culture, existence, meaning—philosophy as interpretation). The second axis runs from Theoretical Philosophy (concerned with truth, knowledge, reality—what is) to Practical Philosophy (concerned with ethics, politics, value—what should be). These two axes create four basic philosophical orientations: analytic-theoretical (philosophy of science, metaphysics), analytic-practical (ethics, political philosophy in analytic style), continental-theoretical (phenomenology, ontology), continental-practical (critical theory, existential ethics). The model reveals that philosophy isn't one thing—it's a spectrum of approaches and concerns.
The 2 Axes of the Spectrum of Philosophy "You say philosophy is useless. The 2 Axes ask: which philosophy? Analytic-theoretical is useless if you want life advice. Continental-practical is useless if you want logical precision. Same philosophy label, completely different functions. The axes help you find what you need—or at least stop dismissing what you don't."
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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An expanded model adding two crucial dimensions to the basic framework. Axis 1: Analytic-Continental (style/method). Axis 2: Theoretical-Practical (concern). Axis 3: Realist-Antirealist (about truth, meaning, value). Axis 4: Individualist-Holist (focus on individual vs. social structures). These four axes create sixteen philosophical positions. Existentialism is continental, practical, often antirealist about universal values, individualist. Marxism is continental (originally), practical, realist about historical truth, holist (class structures primary). The 4 Axes reveal that philosophical schools are defined by clusters of commitments across multiple dimensions.
The 4 Axes of the Spectrum of Philosophy "You think all Continental philosophy is the same. The 4 Axes show otherwise: existentialism is individualist, Marxism is holist. Same continent, different planets. The axes give you the coordinates to see that 'Continental' is a family, not a monolith."
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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A comprehensive model adding dimensions of method and scope. Axis 1: Analytic-Continental. Axis 2: Theoretical-Practical. Axis 3: Realist-Antirealist. Axis 4: Individualist-Holist. Axis 5: A Priori-A Posteriori (knowledge through reason alone vs. through experience). Axis 6: Foundationalist-Coherentist (knowledge needs foundations vs. web of belief). These six axes generate sixty-four philosophical positions. Kant is analytic-ish (proto), theoretical and practical, realist about noumena/antirealist about phenomena, individualist (transcendental subject), a priori (synthetic a priori), foundationalist (transcendental argument). The 6 Axes reveal that methodology and epistemology are inseparable from broader philosophical orientation.
The 6 Axes of the Spectrum of Philosophy "You want to do philosophy. The 6 Axes ask: analytic or continental? Theoretical or practical? Realist or antirealist? Individualist or holist? A priori or a posteriori? Foundationalist or coherentist? Six choices, and they're not independent—choose one, and others are constrained. The axes don't give you a philosophy—they force you to build one."
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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A detailed model adding dimensions of tradition and change. Axis 1: Analytic-Continental. Axis 2: Theoretical-Practical. Axis 3: Realist-Antirealist. Axis 4: Individualist-Holist. Axis 5: A Priori-A Posteriori. Axis 6: Foundationalist-Coherentist. Axis 7: Traditionalist-Progressive (philosophy conserves wisdom vs. philosophy critiques tradition). Axis 8: Systematic-Aphoristic (philosophy as system vs. philosophy as fragments/essays). These eight axes create 256 philosophical positions. Nietzsche is continental, practical, antirealist (about many things), individualist, a posteriori (genealogy), coherentist (will to power as organizing principle), progressive (critiques tradition), aphoristic. Hegel is analytic-ish, theoretical and practical, realist (Absolute), holist, a priori in some readings, foundationalist (dialectic), traditionalist (preserves while sublating), systematic. The 8 Axes demonstrate that style and relationship to tradition are as defining as content.
The 8 Axes of the Spectrum of Philosophy "You think philosophy is just arguments. The 8 Axes show that's one style—systematic, analytic, traditionalist. But aphoristic, progressive, continental philosophy exists, and it's not failed analytic philosophy—it's a different game. The axes help you see that philosophy is a family of practices, not a single method."
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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An ultra-fine-grained model adding dimensions of audience and purpose. Building on the 8 Axes, we add: Axis 9: Esoteric-Exoteric (philosophy for initiates vs. for everyone). Axis 10: Therapeutic-Investigative (philosophy heals vs. philosophy discovers). Axis 11: Descriptive-Prescriptive (philosophy describes reality vs. tells us how to live). Axis 12: Secular-Sacred (philosophy independent of religion vs. continuous with spiritual practice). These twelve axes generate 4096 philosophical positions. Stoicism is both theoretical and practical, realist (logos), individualist, a posteriori and a priori, coherentist, traditionalist (follow nature), aphoristic and systematic, exoteric, therapeutic, prescriptive, sacred (cosmos as divine). The 12 Axes reveal that ancient philosophy was often therapeutic and sacred—a very different project from modern academic philosophy.
The 12 Axes of the Spectrum of Philosophy "You think philosophy is useless because it doesn't make you happier. The 12 Axes ask: which philosophy? Stoicism is therapeutic—it's designed to make you happier. Academic metaphysics isn't. Same label, completely different purposes. The axes help you find the philosophy you need, not just the philosophy that exists."
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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The ultimate model, adding the final dimensions of relationship to science and to life. Building on the 12 Axes, we add: Axis 13: Scientistic-Humanistic (philosophy should emulate science vs. philosophy is distinct from science). Axis 14: Professional-Public (philosophy for academics vs. for everyone). Axis 15: Critical-Constructive (philosophy deconstructs vs. philosophy builds). Axis 16: Autonomous-Embedded (philosophy stands alone vs. embedded in culture, politics, life). These sixteen axes generate 65,536 potential positions—enough to capture every philosophical movement, every school, every thinker, every approach. The 16 Axes of the Spectrum of Philosophy reveal that philosophy is not a single discipline but a multidimensional space of practices, purposes, and styles. The 16 Axes don't tell you what to believe—they tell you who you are as a philosopher. And until you can answer them, you're not doing philosophy—you're just repeating what you've heard.
The 16 Axes of the Spectrum of Philosophy "You want to know what philosophy is. The 16 Axes answer: it depends. For Plato, philosophy was esoteric, sacred, constructive, embedded, humanistic, public, theoretical and practical, realist, holist, a priori, foundationalist, traditionalist, systematic, therapeutic, prescriptive. For a contemporary analytic philosopher, it's exoteric, secular, critical, autonomous, scientistic, professional, theoretical, realist or antirealist depending, individualist often, a posteriori often, coherentist often, progressive, systematic, investigative, descriptive. Same word, sixteen axes of difference. The axes don't define philosophy—they give you a language to ask what anyone means by it. And that's the most philosophical thing of all."

The axes allow you to locate any philosopher, any tradition, any text—and to understand what kind of philosophy you're doing, or want to do. Are you analytic or continental? Theoretical or practical? Realist or antirealist? Individualist or holist? A priori or a posteriori? Foundationalist or coherentist? Traditionalist or progressive? Systematic or aphoristic? Esoteric or exoteric? Therapeutic or investigative? Descriptive or prescriptive? Secular or sacred? Scientistic or humanistic? Professional or public? Critical or constructive? Autonomous or embedded? Sixteen questions, and your answers define your philosophy.
by Dumu The Void February 25, 2026
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