I would roughly divide philosophies into two categories, “crazy” and “sensible”. Of the two, I definitely prefer the former. Sensible philosophies are noted for their sobriety, propriety, rationality, analytic skill and other things. One definite advantage they have is that they are usually quite sensible. Crazy philosophies are characterized by their madness, spontaneity, sense of humor, total freedom from the most basic conventions of thought, amorality, beauty, divinity, naturalness, poesy, absolute honesty, freedom from inhibitions, contrariness, paradoxicalness, lack of discipline and general yum-yummyness. … … In general I would say that psychologist, psychiatrist, economists, sociologists and political scientists tend towards the “sensible”, whereas artists, poets, musicians and (to my great delight!) chemists, theoretical physicists, mathematicians—especially mathematical logicians—tend towards what I call “crazy”.
Raymond M. Smullyan, The Tao Is Silent