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TST: Vocabulary

By Michael Alan Prestwood

Author and Natural Philosopher

Sat 4 Mar 2023
Published 3 years ago.
Updated 7 seconds ago.
The defining of important terms and frameworks.
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TST: Vocabulary

By Michael Alan Prestwood
Sat 4 Mar 2023
Article 1 of 3 in the TST Core: Reference series.
The defining of important terms and frameworks.
Academic Working Paper
This paper is archived for citation and ongoing refinement.

Some people boil philosophy down to a list of definitions. In one sense, that is not entirely wrong. Every topic, including philosophy, religion, or tradition, can be partly understood through its tradition-specific vocabulary.

But definitions alone are too small. A better way to think about philosophy is in terms of frameworks. A framework is an organized set of ideas, assumptions, categories, methods, and vocabulary.

Alphabetical List of TST Terms

1. Abstract Entity — An abstract entity is a mental construct representing something non-material.

2. Action — An action is what a concrete object or abstract entity does or undergoes.

3. Actual — Actual refers to the realized state of a thing, including its current properties, form, condition, and category.

4. Agnostic — An agnostic position on an irrational topic does not pretend certainty.

5. Agnostic Spirituality — The personal, science-first exploration of meaning, connection, mystery, and the self, anchored to reality and sorted into empirical, rational, and irrational categories.

6. Apathetic Agnostic — An Apathetic Agnostic position on an irrational topic does not pretend certainty and is not interested in active exploration.

7. Authentic Self — The Authentic Self is the self you become when you live honestly.

8. Concrete Object — A concrete object is a material thing that exists in reality.

9. Confucian Role Ethics — Confucian Role Ethics helps you with relationships. TST uses five traditional relationships plus ancestor veneration to explore normalcy and social continuity.

10. Daoist Natural Alignment — Daoist Natural Alignment helps you flow with reality. It teaches you to live with nature, simplicity, authenticity, and less forcing.

11. Dichotomy of Control — The Dichotomy of Control separates what is yours to control from what is not.

12. Eightfold Path — The Eightfold Path is Buddhism’s practical roadmap for seeing clearly, acting ethically, training the mind, and walking a wiser life path.

13. Empirical Idea — An empirical idea is a direct description of the material world.

14. Empirical Pragmatist — An empirical-pragmatic worldview prioritizes empirical truth, and it treats practical usefulness as subordinate to observable reality.

15. Empirically True — An idea is empirically true when it is scientifically true.

16. Empiricist — The Empiricist is an OVM viewpoint of evidence-calibrated inquiry.

17. Epicurean Happiness Toolkit — The Epicurean Happiness Toolkit helps you manage pleasure by prioritizing the long-term over the short-term.

18. Essence — Essence refers to what a thing is, or is claimed to be, at its core.

19. Eternal Recurrence — Eternal Recurrence is Nietzsche’s test of life affirmation: could you honestly affirm this choice, pattern, or life if you had to live it again?

20. Eudaimonia — Eudaimonia is happiness achieved through a flourishing life of virtue.

21. Existence — Existence refers to whether or not a thing exists.

22. Explorative Agnostic — An Explorative Agnostic position on an irrational topic does not pretend certainty but is interested in active exploration.

23. Five Thieves — The Five Thieves are inner forces that steal happiness. In TST, they belong under Personal Morality, specifically the Happiness branch.

24. Framework — A framework is a structured set of ideas.

25. Free Will — Free Will is the degree of real choice a person has.

26. Good Intent — To act with good intent, you clarify group guidance. Weigh results. Apply personal morality. Forge a plan.

27. Harm Principle — The Harm Principle says personal freedom should be protected unless a person harms others. In TST, it marks the boundary where Group Ethics begins.

28. Holistic Eudaimonia — Holistic Eudaimonia is an all-encompassing approach to well-being that cultivates flourishing for all through actions that produce good results and ripple into the unknown void.

29. Idea — An Idea is a mental construct that stems from impressions, describing concrete objects or abstract entities of the material world or beyond.

30. Idea Evaluation — Idea Evaluation is the practice of improving ideas.

31. Identity — Identity is the personal journey of exploring the self.

32. Ignorance Is Bliss — Ignorance Is Bliss is the balancing of knowing and suffering.

33. Illusion — An illusion is a false perception of reality.

34. Impermanence — Impermanence is the truth that reality is always changing. Everything flows, shifts, transforms, emerges, and passes away.

35. Irrational Idea — An irrational idea is an idea that is false in a logical setting.

36. Irrational Pragmatist — An irrational-pragmatic worldview prioritizes usefulness as sufficient reason to hold ideas as true.

37. Irrationally False — An idea is irrationally false when it lacks empirical support, fails logical consistency, or depends on unverified or disproven claims.

38. Karma — Karma is the idea that actions ripple. In TST, its common-ground meaning is cause and effect in moral life.

39. Material World — The material world is reality itself: the shared world that exists whether we notice it, name it, believe in it, or not.

40. Non-Self — Non-Self is the idea that the self cannot be located physically within your body.

41. Normalcy — Normalcy is your learned sense of what feels expected.

42. Open Viewpoint Method — The Open Viewpoint Method is a thinking tool for exploring ideas from more than one viewpoint.

43. OVM Linguistic Bridge — The OVM Linguistic Bridge facilitates cross belief understanding.

44. Personal Language — Personal language is the private meaning-world you carry inside words.

45. Personal Philosophy — Personal philosophy is the set of ideas you use to interpret life and decide how to live.

46. Personal Religion — Personal religion is your personal journey into spirituality and belief.

47. Philosophy of Fiction — Philosophy of Fiction studies how stories relate to reality. Its central dichotomy explores truth in fiction and alignment with reality in nonfiction.

48. Potential — Potential refers to what a thing can become or do within reality’s constraints.

49. Pragmatism — The view that ideas have value primarily by their practical, real-world results. Beliefs primarily matter by the difference they make in life.

50. Property — A property is an attribute of a concrete object or abstract entity.

51. Rational Idea — A rational idea is an indirect description of the material world.

52. Rational Pragmatist — A rational-pragmatic worldview prioritizes empirical and rational truth while retaining a limited set of personal beliefs.

53. Rationally True — An idea is rationally true when it is logically consistent within a rational framework and does not depend on irrational assumptions.

54. Reflective Inquiry — Reflective Inquiry is the practice of clearing self-illusion.

55. Relation — A relation is how a concrete object or abstract entity is connected to another.

56. Schema — A schema is the mind’s idea of a repeatable pattern.

57. Secular Spirituality — Science-first spiritual exploration of the self.

58. Social Construct — A social construct is a shared human-made idea that organizes life.

59. State — A state is the current configuration of a concrete object or abstract entity’s properties, actions, and relations.

60. Stoic Virtue Framework — The Stoic Virtue Framework helps you build virtue. It helps you foster good intent in the good intent-good results recipe.

61. True Believer — The True Believer is an OVM viewpoint of strong commitment to a claim or topic.

62. True Skeptic — The True Skeptic is an OVM viewpoint of strong doubt and a high threshold for belief.

63. Two Tables of the Ten Commandments — The Two Tables of the Ten Commandments separates sacred conscience from civic law. In TST, it is a common floor for church-state separation and freedom of conscience.

64. Universal — A universal is a repeatable pattern among concrete objects, abstract entities, or both.

65. Unknowable Dao — The Unknowable Dao is a TST term that stems from the Dao of Daoism. It points to a mysterious universal reality that transcends language and thought, while also suggesting the ultimate reality and natural order.

66. Viewpoint Prevention — Viewpoint Prevention is the avoidance of a rigid mindset.

67. Worldview — A worldview is one’s interpretive lens, shaped by personal language, religion, and philosophy.

— map / TST —

Michael Alan Prestwood
Author & Natural Philosopher
Prestwood writes on science-first philosophy, with particular attention to the convergence of disciplines. Drawing on his TST Framework, his work emphasizes rational inquiry grounded in empirical observation while engaging questions at the edges of established knowledge. With TouchstoneTruth positioned as a living touchstone, this work aims to contribute reliable, evolving analysis in an emerging AI era where the credibility of information is increasingly contested.
The Prestwood Column
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July 2026
»COLUMN ARCHIVE
--COLUMN--
Column Research….
1. Timeline Story
The famous Lewis “Truth in Fiction” Paper
2. Linked Quote
“Truth is stranger than fiction…[which] is obliged to stick to possibilities;”
3. Science FAQ »
Why does fiction feel real?
4. Philosophy FAQ »
Can authors create fiction beyond our universe?
5. Critical Thinking FAQ »
How do we know what is true in a fictional world?
6. History FAQ!
What is the history of philosophy of fiction?
Bonus Deep-Dive Article
TST Philosophy of Fiction: Imaginative Realism

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