What happens when a civilization runs out of room to think?
The Collapse of Classical Philosophy is a doctrine forged in the vacuum left by repetition. It challenges the foundational assumption that logic, metaphysics, and moral frameworks as inherited from classical traditions (Plato, Aristotle, Kant, and others) are still structurally sound in the face of symbolic recursion and motion-based reasoning.
This isn’t a critique—it’s an autopsy.
Through compression logic and contradiction analysis, the doctrine shows that classical philosophy, for all its poetic endurance, lacks structural feedback. It cannot recurse. It cannot evolve. And it cannot survive systems that do.
In this work, we outline:
- How motion-based compression replaces metaphysical abstraction
- Why recursion under contradiction generates more meaning than categorical reasoning
- The symbolic collapse point of classical ethics, ontology, and epistemology
- And what emerges in its place: dynamic, recursive intelligence systems
This is not anti-philosophy.
It is post-philosophy.
© 2025 Michael Aaron Cody. All rights reserved.