Can There Ever Be Another Worthwhile Philosophical System? I feel as though you’re manufacturing disagreement where there is none. I will say, that there isn’t any way to completely abstract experience is an assumption, as is saying that abstract reality is an illusion (although objectivity is admittedly always tentative). I completely however agree that higher logical order is created through moral action—that is the whole gist of my philosophy. And yes, in that sense I completely agree that belief systems and life projects are important. — Adam Hilstad
Don't get me wrong, your style is clear, and I see lots of excellent assumptions. "Meaning, in an important sense, is always determined by what an expression ought to mean. Meaning is ethical." I think this is insightful. "If we don’t make some effort to understand that with which we disagree, then who will?" This reminds me of Habermas. But the way you wrap it in this overarching concept of normalization seems overly-analytical.
"Normalization may also be understood as the continuous, iterative neutralization of artificiality within the understanding."
This seems artificial; understanding is natural, we make it artificial, when we over-analyze, and forget that it is an ongoing balanced project of analysis and synthesis, often occurring at an intuitive level. That said, I admire an ambitious system and it may work well for those with more of a taste for analyticity; I'm more of a holistic thinker.