our understanding tends to find its way into our language, but there is definitely more to an idea than its paraphrasing as a one liner. Some way to browse themes based on a GUI which would enable the noticing of differing deltas and how they branch into other topics would be very useful especially when it comes to philosophy which terms (and themes) tend to be semantically overloaded. I have haven’t had the time to spend more time at your site and I have no way of knowing what criteria did you choose to parse what you consider to be ideas (did you just read philosophical terms off a dictionary and parsed them in source texts?). For example, you don't list "piety" as one of your themes, nor do you "question" as such (even though you do "argument" 8), but I don't see the one liner: “Questioning is the piety of thought” by Martin Heidegger (which original statement in the source language: „Fragen ist die Frömmigkeit des Denkens“, I would include (some translations are a bit too "explaining", my translation would be: "questioning is the way to worship thoughts" or "worship thoughts by questioning (them)")):
http://www.philosophyideas.com/search/response_philosopherTe.asp?era_no=A&am...
Take "techne": 11365, as a general concept with a rich and protracted history in philosophy. That concept and its constellation of ideas were one of the earliest and most crucially constitutive for the development of later sciences and technologies. Both Plato and Aristotle engaged it at length in more or less explicit ways and was the underlying structuring concept in the most important text ever written: the deductive corpus compiled by Euclid 300 BC ("Euclid’s Elements"). However, this is all you have to say about it: [filed under theme 1. Philosophy / B. History of Ideas / 3. Greek-English Lexicon ] Full Idea: Techne: skill, practical knowledge Gist of Idea: Techne: skill, practical knowledge Source: PG (Db (lexicon) [c.1001 BCE], 82) ~ lbrtchx