I want to talk about why philosophy is actually far more important than people think, especially when it comes to software engineering, systems design, and AI.
When most people hear the word "philosophy," they roll their eyes. They think of abstract, circular arguments that don't matter in the real world. But true philosophy, good philosophy, is more like base mathematics. It is base physics. It is the raw understanding of the essence of a concept and how that translates into real-world action.
If you don't understand the origin of a thing, you are left playing a game of perceptions. You will circle around a problem, coming up with endless rationalizations, but you will be completely unable to predict where it is going to go next.
The origin of something is it fundamental nature. This origin is actually its bounding box. It dictates the absolute limits of its trajectory. Knowing this gives you predictive capability before you execute. It is the a priori knowledge that separates actual engineers from people who just copy-paste solutions. (When should and how should you copy paste, for example, 'it depends'.)
The Gun Analogy and Inherent Limitations







