There is no hard and fast rule.
I guess it is up to each person to decide.
I actually feel pretty iffy about ethics. I feel that the proper forum to study ethic is sociology not philosophy, same goes for law and politics. These are subjects of legal studies, and political science respectively.
I would have to disagree with you on the aesthetics. The questions like ""what is art?" "what is beauty?" seem to be at the heart of philosophy. And often time the boundary between the lines of branches is not very clear. For example Kant applied concepts of aesthetics to ethics.[1]
2006-09-28 08:06:18
·
answer #1
·
answered by hq3 6
·
1⤊
0⤋
Here's a simple and inclusive way of looking at it.
Three main divisions:
1. Metaphilosophy. You might not have come across this term. All it means is 'philosophy about philosophy'. Your question is a metaphilosophical one. The main sub-topics of this division are the divisions or branches, ends and means (goals and methods) of philosophy.
2. Pure philosophy. The topics in this division are those that are usually listed as the branches of philosophy. They all cluster around the central concept of 'knowledge'. They include linguistic meaning, reasoning, epistemology itself, metaphysics, the mind, and axiology (which is anything to do with values, including both ethics and aesthetics).
3. Applied philosophy. This is the application of philosophical ends and means to all topics (other, of course, than those in divisions 1 and 2). You can usually recognize an applied philosophy topic by its being called 'Philosophy of....X', where X might be religion, science, politics, art, business, sport, etc. What's often called 'applied ethics' also belongs in this division.
Note that although Aesthetics and Philosophy of Art are obviously closely related they are quite distinct. Aesthetics is about aesthetic values, but, although artistic values are aesthetic values, not all aesthetic values are artistic - some are 'natural'.
2006-09-26 19:08:03
·
answer #2
·
answered by brucebirdfield 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Philosophy is a field of study that includes diverse subfields such as aesthetics, epistemology, ethics, logic, and metaphysics. Additionally, Philosophy may be divided into the Western and Eastern traditions.
Western:
1 Greco-Roman philosophy
2 Medieval philosophy
3 Modern Western philosophy
4 Analytic and Continental
Eastern:
1 Indian philosophy
2 Persian philosophy
3 Chinese philosophy
2006-09-26 18:12:16
·
answer #3
·
answered by college_republicans_club 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
Historians will say that heritage is recorded human heritage--to that end it would not initiate till writing (heiroglyphics frequently counts). some archaeology overlaps with heritage, even though it may go lower back further, a lot further. Theology, and it truly is a wager, kinda starts with writing too (how a lot historic faith are you able to purchased in the previous people wrote down memories?). Theology isn't heritage, a minimum of to lecturers. The memories mirror the human beings, as does economics, military activities, social customes etc,--it truly is all heritage. although the beliefs themselves are not heritage to absolutely everyone yet those who nonetheless carry them :) NB: people determined those catagories of information. the files itself does no longer categorize so incredible. lately there is an incredible style of "interdisiplinary" artwork.
2016-12-02 03:45:49
·
answer #4
·
answered by ? 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
Philosophy is just a fancy word for expressing an idea that you spent lots of time thinking about. There are no rules in philosophy. Ideas are catagorized for reference purposes, but it's not science.
2006-09-26 18:43:58
·
answer #5
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
http://www.cebuplus.com/arts/441/philosophy.html
2006-09-26 18:10:37
·
answer #6
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
you
me
us
them
nothing
2006-09-26 19:25:43
·
answer #7
·
answered by 2Horses 2
·
0⤊
0⤋