I see.
When you say the majority should be those subjects, how much would you have in there for maths, sciences, history, etc.
These are effectively the subjects that I'd have in the curriculum throughout the student's life from kindergarten to high school:
Foreign languages (Latin, Greek, French, German)*
Philosophy/Logic
Nutrition/Exercise
Music**
Mathematics
The Natural Sciences***
Geography****
*Foreign languages would only be a part of the student's curriculum until there is sufficient mastery to read philosophy in the respective languages. At that time, the foreign language education would give way to reading philosophy in that language, much as learning English grammar/spelling early on in education gives way to English literature in hgih school.
**By this I mean learning to play and listening to heavy metal and classical music.
***Education in the natural sciences would only be given later in the student's education, only after he's begun his education in philosophy and logic, and only with respect to the degree that it is practical for him to know it. So he'd learn about diseases and bacteria, but not about Darwin. He'd learn about the body, but not about the brain's relationship to thinking (since this falls under philosophy, not science).
****Only taught in high school, and then only enough to give the student a decent enough idea of the world in which he currently lives. History wouldn't be taught, since it isn't good for the student to think that his life has some kind of a historic context. The student must regularly be reminded of the words of Jean-Paul Sartre: "Existence precedes essence," and "The future is virgin." The student must be taught that he is a self-creation.