"Everything that is true is true because of some [logically] prior reason sufficient to make it true."
Doesn't that provide the structure to both justify and motivate going meta? It may not be precisely equivalent, but it seems pretty close. Intuitively, we expect going meta to produce more broadly applicable rulesets, rather than just a prior cause; but I have a feeling that's simply a learned expectation because it usually does so; sufficient reasons ought to behave similarly.
I agree that PSR can justify one variety of "going meta". I don't agree that a practice of frequently "going meta" requires, or implies, any sort of PSR. I am prepared to be convinced, but so far it doesn't seem that anyone who disagrees with me thinks it worth the effort of convincing me.
One of the sharpest and most important tools in the LessWrong cognitive toolkit is the idea of going meta, also called seeking whence or jumping out of the system, all terms crafted by Douglas Hofstadter. Though popularized by Hofstadter and repeatedly emphasized by Eliezer in posts like "Lost Purposes" and "Taboo Your Words", Wikipedia indicates that similar ideas have been around in philosophy since at least Anaximander in the form of the Principle of Sufficient Reason (PSR). I think it'd be only appropriate to seek whence this idea of seeking whence, taking a history of ideas perspective. I'd also like analyses of where the theme shows up and why it's appealing and so on, since again it seems pretty important to LessWrong epistemology. Topics that I'd like to see discussed are: