In philosophy, first principles are a set of basic, foundational propositions or assumptions that cannot be deduced from any other proposition or assumption.
A first principle is one that cannot be deduced from any other. The classic example is that of Euclid's (see Euclid's Elements) geometry; its hundreds of propositions can be deduced from a set of definitions, postulates, and common notions: all three of which constitute "First Principles".
and in English translation:
This principle is the first expression of consistency in western thought. Any defining and reasoning in any language on any topic assumes it a priori. It cannot be doubted, as all doubting is based on inconsistency, which assumes consistency a priori.
Some thinkers, especially in the 20th century, have salvaged the notion that true first principles are available. In his Principia Mathematica, Bertrand Russell attempted to subsume all mathematical truths under the first principles of formal logic; however, Kurt Gödel launched a savage attack not only on Russell's system but on the very possibility of such a system, contending that any logical system that was consistent could not be complete, and any system that was complete could not be entirely self-consistent.
Likewise, Heidegger attacked something perhaps underlying the notion of first principle, that is, the need to represent the world, and the dualism that that task, in his view, entails.
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"First principles".
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