Tag Human Common Ground

What is accessible and shared by all humans through common epistemic sources.

The Crisis of Currents: Between the Absence of Foundational Logic and the Drain of Energies

Over time, intellectual, philosophical, and religious schools have been divided between reformist, conservative, and moderate currents, generally moving within the space of interpretive frameworks dominating individuals and groups. In the absence of Foundational Logic capable of distinguishing between the fixed and the variable, these schools have entered into a state of confusion that produced hybrid forms such as the “religious liberal” or the “sectarian modernist”—pragmatic attempts at adaptation rather than coherent epistemological constructions. In the modern era, a modernist current has emerged within these schools, seeking to reshape the entire project according to the logic of modernity, even if that meant breaking away from its original foundations. This condition renders the project closer to a political movement, governed by the logic of the possible, compromises, and conflicts—rather than by a shared rationality. From here arises the crisis of currents: instead of energies being directed toward the development of the project, they are drained in internal battles.

The Crisis of Human Knowledge between Multiple Sources and the Veil of Insight

Humanity faces a profound crisis in the field of knowledge, manifested in the multiplicity of its sources—each claiming possession of the truth—in defining the role of reason, which cannot on its own produce sufficient knowledge, and in the veil of insight, which makes human perception conditioned by inherited traditions and prior assumptions.

This crisis has not been systematically addressed in traditional philosophical or scientific schools; rather, it has often been overlooked or unnoticed. While scientific and philosophical progress has gradually revealed new gaps, the absence of a comprehensive epistemic framework renders the transition toward a more stable reality unattainable.

Takamolya Rationality and Existential Critique – The Dual Path to Freedom from Bias

Although humans possess the ability for critical thinking, this ability often operates from within biased perceptual lenses. This creates the need for a methodological tool to purify information before adopting it (Existential Critique), and another to rebuild knowledge on neutral rational foundations (Takamolya Rationality). The issue addressed by the article is: How can humans filter their knowledge sources from bias, and then establish knowledge fit for common human exchange?

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