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I agree with @grp.
MO is not "ready" in the sense that enough people do not believe such questions could hold interesting answers (for them individually) -- and they are not even willing to give it the benefit of the doubt: see what answers actually appear and let the community measure this by up- and down-votes.
Maybe, in the future, the mentality will change and relax about this kind of thing, who knows. Probably, it won't for the next few years until a second generation of users develops.
In the mean time, you could
Ah! Thanks, Joel. I hadn't check whether it had already been posted... Silly me.
Although the question has some intrinsic interest, I was one of those who voted to close, and I would do so again. I just feel that the question, especially as it was phrased, invited argument, and more importantly was being asked of the wrong audience. Why should mathematicians presume to know what philosophers "should" know about mathematics?
The mention of Markovian processes just seemed like one-upsmanship, I'm afraid, though I accept it probably wasn't intended as such.
The part of the question that read
Does the lack of knowledge about math or science in general, have an impact on a philosopher's ability to reason about the world and figure the right path to follow?
seemed to me either vague or almost impossible to answer properly. Are we talking about a hypothetical philosopher? the Platonic ideal of a philosopher? actual philosophers, naming names and giving examples?
I would have much more time for questions like "What should analysts know about category theory?", even though I think that question would also be open to the charge of being subjective+argumentative; but at least some analysts might read the question, and it is their answers which would ultimately be more valuable. (In contrast, "what are some good applications of category theory to analysis?" would be a question where I'd be most interested to hear from the categorists.)
In short: it seemed to me that a proper answer to the question, as opposed to one that made everyone feel superior, was unlikely to materialize, and that if left open the question would attract answers of low quality. But this, I admit, remains a fairly subjective call on my part.
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