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815 bytes added ,  21:38, 18 August 2007
New page: '''Philosophy''' is ancient Greek for the love of wisdom. However, all cultures — be they prehistoric, ancient, mediæval, or modern; [[Eastern hemisphere|E...
'''Philosophy''' is [[ancient Greek]] for the love of wisdom. However, all cultures — be they [[prehistoric]], [[ancient]], [[mediæval]], or [[Modernism|modern]]; [[Eastern hemisphere|Eastern]], [[Western hemisphere|Western]], [[religious]] or [[secular]] — have had their own unique schools of philosophy, arrived at through both inheritance and through independent discovery. Such theories have grown from different [[premise|premises]] and approaches, examples of which include (but are not limited to) [[rationalism]] (theories arrived at through [[logic]]), [[empiricism]] (theories arrived at through observation), and even through [[leap of faith|leaps of faith]], hope and inheritance (such as the [[supernatural|supernaturalist]] philosophies and [[religion|religions]]).

[[Category: The Humanities]]