“We are not dealing with “functional,” quantitative relations among variables, but with human reason and will causing certain action, which is not “determinable” or reducible to outside forces. The only “natural laws” (if we may use such an old-fashioned but perfectly legitimate label for such constant regularities) in human action are qualitative rather than quantitative.”
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- On solving problems
- 1-1c4b You always have to solve problems, including the problem of what problems to solve
- 3-1b0a You can think forward and invert insofar as you have a problem to solve
- 5-1a3 We don’t derive an ought from an is. Only problems exist. We can just solve them.
- 7-1b6 There are only problems to be solved. Types of problems are arbitrary, because one type can be easily morphed into another.
- Knowledge creation must be accounted for