QQ about the qualifier ‘philosophical’ in your question “What if I’m mainly interested in how philosophical reasoning ideally ought to work?”
Are you suggesting that ‘philosophical’ reasoning differs in an essential way from other kinds of reasoning, because of the subject matter that qualifies it? Are you more or less inclined to views like Kant’s ‘Critique of Pure Reason,’ where the nature of philosophical subjects puts limits on the ability to reason about them?
I wrote a post about my current guesses at what distinguishes philosophical from other kinds of reasoning. Let me know if that doesn’t answer your question.
QQ about the qualifier ‘philosophical’ in your question “What if I’m mainly interested in how philosophical reasoning ideally ought to work?”
Are you suggesting that ‘philosophical’ reasoning differs in an essential way from other kinds of reasoning, because of the subject matter that qualifies it? Are you more or less inclined to views like Kant’s ‘Critique of Pure Reason,’ where the nature of philosophical subjects puts limits on the ability to reason about them?
I wrote a post about my current guesses at what distinguishes philosophical from other kinds of reasoning. Let me know if that doesn’t answer your question.