This chapter bridges metaphysics and empirical science by proposing ontic intelligence as the foundation for a unified epistemology. Drawing on Husserl’s phenomenology, it posits that pure intuition—the unmediated perception of Being—precedes and informs rational analysis, serving as the bedrock of scientific truth. The text critiques the overreliance on logic and programmed rationality (e.g., artificial intelligence) as insufficient for grasping vital, dynamic realities, arguing that such approaches lack the creative discernment inherent to human intuition. Central themes include: (1) The Ontic Principle: The “Unmoved Mover” as the source of ontological continuity, manifesting through information fields that unify metaphysical Being (BEING) with its phenomenological expressions (being); (2) Intuition Versus Artificial Rationality: Human intuition’s capacity to perceive and correct distortions in information fields contrasts with AI’s mechanical reproduction of fixed logic, which lacks adaptive creativity; and (3) Science as Ontic Evidence: True science emerges when analytical methods remain tethered to ontic intuition, avoiding ideological contamination from cultural or semantic biases. The chapter calls for a paradigm shift toward ontic science, where metaphysics and empiricism converge through the study of information fields. This framework challenges reductionist models, advocating instead for a holistic epistemology that integrates transcendent intelligence, phenomenological multiplicity, and psychotherapeutic remediation of cognitive distortions.

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From Metaphysics to Science

  • Alécio Vidor

摘要

This chapter bridges metaphysics and empirical science by proposing ontic intelligence as the foundation for a unified epistemology. Drawing on Husserl’s phenomenology, it posits that pure intuition—the unmediated perception of Being—precedes and informs rational analysis, serving as the bedrock of scientific truth. The text critiques the overreliance on logic and programmed rationality (e.g., artificial intelligence) as insufficient for grasping vital, dynamic realities, arguing that such approaches lack the creative discernment inherent to human intuition. Central themes include: (1) The Ontic Principle: The “Unmoved Mover” as the source of ontological continuity, manifesting through information fields that unify metaphysical Being (BEING) with its phenomenological expressions (being); (2) Intuition Versus Artificial Rationality: Human intuition’s capacity to perceive and correct distortions in information fields contrasts with AI’s mechanical reproduction of fixed logic, which lacks adaptive creativity; and (3) Science as Ontic Evidence: True science emerges when analytical methods remain tethered to ontic intuition, avoiding ideological contamination from cultural or semantic biases. The chapter calls for a paradigm shift toward ontic science, where metaphysics and empiricism converge through the study of information fields. This framework challenges reductionist models, advocating instead for a holistic epistemology that integrates transcendent intelligence, phenomenological multiplicity, and psychotherapeutic remediation of cognitive distortions.