What of these other fours?
 Post appears BELOW Table of Contents.
 This blog focuses on similarities between others' four-folds, tetrads, tetrachotomies, and mine, and includes links to online information on others’ fours in their own terms. It results from overgrowth of an old post at The Tetrast "What of these other fours?".
Table of Contents

Fours that I've
adopted or adapted:
Fours with a striking
likeness to mine:
Fours involving some
likeness to mine:
More-or-less different fours:
Unless otherwise stated within the post, first posted on Friday, December 5, 2008. Post times here are just a device to control the order of appearance. Most of the posts are based on entries in an older post "What of These Other Fours?" at The Tetrast.
Stephen R. Palmquist's diagrammatic four-folds
Dr. Stephen R. Palmquist's diagrammatic four-folds. Palmquist has written books on Kant and is interested in the diagrammatic representation of structures among ideas, including ideas related by twinned two-valued parameters (my lingo, not his), which is where we cross paths. He has said that a good place to start in understanding his diagrams is Chapter 5 of his book The Tree of Philosophy.
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