An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 02 – Logic Part 3: Do politicians lie?

Fallacies thrive in disguise. They sneak into arguments wearing confidence, emotion, or authority, hoping we won’t look too closely. Logic gives us the tools to spot these tricks, not with anger, but with clarity and even humor. Once you learn to recognize fallacies, arguments lose their magic spells, and persuasion becomes something you can evaluate rather than absorb.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 02 – Logic Part 2: Are you kidding me?

An argument isn’t a shouting match. It’s a structure. When built carefully, with clear premises and a thoughtful conclusion, an argument becomes a bridge between ideas. Logic teaches us how to test our own beliefs, not just defend them, and to discover which ones can stand on their own and which ones need repair. Building arguments well is an act of curiosity, not combat.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 02 – Logic Part 1: Introduction – What is Logic?

Logic isn’t about killing curiosity or winning arguments. It’s a superpower that helps us slow down, clear the fog, and see what actually holds together. When we learn to separate what merely sounds true from what can be supported, we gain confidence, clarity, and a kind of intellectual freedom. Logic gives us a lantern for navigating ideas without fear.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 01 – Part 7: Summary – Why give a fuck (about Philosophy)?

Philosophy matters because it teaches us how to see the world without blinders. It doesn’t promise easy answers or perfect outcomes, but it offers something better: clarity, perspective, and intention. Wisdom helps us recognize the patterns beneath the chaos and gives us the freedom to move through life with our eyes open, asking better questions and making more meaningful choices.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 01 – Part 6:  What the fuck is a Paradigm?

A paradigm is the invisible frame that quietly shapes what we think is possible. Philosophy loves to poke at that frame, not to destroy it, but to remind us it isn’t the whole picture. When we step outside what we think we know, we discover something exhilarating: the world is always larger, stranger, and more interesting than our current understanding allows.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 01 – Part 5: Where are my glasses?

Philosophy doesn’t always hand us new information; sometimes it simply teaches us how to see. Like finding glasses already perched on our head, insight often arrives with a quiet laugh rather than a dramatic reveal. The world hasn’t changed, but our way of looking has. And once our eyes adjust, what was invisible becomes impossible to unsee.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 01 – Part 4: Was Buddha God?

Western philosophy teaches us to analyze, define, and test. Eastern philosophy invites us to notice, sit, and become aware. Neither is complete on its own. When logic meets intuition, and analysis meets presence, wisdom widens its lens. Philosophy is richest when it listens across cultures, honoring both the mind that asks and the silence that answers.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 01 – Part 3: Why did they kill Socrates?

History has never been kind to those who ask dangerous questions. Socrates knew this. So did every thinker who dared to challenge comfortable truths. The Socratic method isn’t about tearing things down for sport; it’s about holding a mirror steady and asking us to look again. Philosophy reminds us that growth often begins in discomfort, and that the most courageous questions are not the ones we ask the world, but the ones we finally ask ourselves.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 01 – Part 2: Who has the time?

We’re told that speed equals success, that stillness is wasted time. Philosophy gently disagrees. In the quiet moments, when the noise loosens its grip, wisdom has space to speak. Reflection isn’t an escape from life’s urgency; it’s how we learn what actually matters. Sometimes the bravest move isn’t pushing forward, but pausing long enough to listen.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 01 – Part 1: Introduction (What is Philosophy?)

Philosophy isn’t a lecture or a list of answers. It’s a living conversation. It begins the moment we dare to say “I don’t know” and feel curious instead of ashamed. Philosophy asks us to wonder out loud, to turn ideas over like smooth stones in our hands, and to invite others into the questioning. This series begins not with conclusions, but with an open invitation: pull up a chair, ask your own questions, and join the dance.

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