Liberty
University PHIL 201 quiz 4 solutions answers right
How
many versions: 3 different versions
Question 1 According to Dew and Foreman,
faith is one of the sources of knowledge.
Question 2 According to Hume, why can we
never arrive at certainty?
Question 3 Hume’s fork consisted of:
Question 4 Epicureans held to empiricism
because:
Question 5 Knowledge arrived at
immediately:
Question 6 An argument used by Descartes to
prove Gods existence:
Question 7 Locke divided knowledge into
matters of fact and relations of ideas.
Question 8 The elements of a proposition
include:
Question 9 Scientific antirealism is the
view that science does not claim objects like electrons actually exist. They
are just a fictional construct to explain how things work. This view fits best
with which truth theory:
Question 10 Plato develops the traditional
view of knowledge in one particular book of his. What is the title of that
specific book by Plato? (Note: “Complete Works” is not the answer.)
Question 11 A sufficient condition is:
Question 12 In response to the Gettier
Problem, Keith Lerher and Thomas Paxson revise JTB as:
Question 13 We should study epistemology so
that we can find confidence on the biggest questions of life.
Question 14 Epistemology might is best
described as “the study of Knowledge.”
Question 15 Gettier Problems show that:
Question 16 Which of the following is NOT a
problem with Pragmatism:
Question 17 The correspondence theory of
truth is thought by some philosophers to be a pretheoretic intuition that we
philosophize with, not to.
Question 18 According to Dew and Foreman,
if something exists, then something must be true of about the things that
exists.
Question 19 Postmodern antirealism argues
that our perception comes to us through the subjective filters of our minds.
Question 20 Tests for truth are meant to
define the nature of truth itself.
Question 1 Which of the following can be
classified as a priori knowledge?
Question 2 Which of the following is NOT
one of the five sources of knowledge listed in Dew & Foreman:
Question 3 The Aristotelian approach that
Bacon critiqued was deduction.
Question 4 According to Dew and Foreman,
faith is one of the sources of knowledge.
Question 5 According to Plato, how do we
gain genuine knowledge?
Question 6 In the end Kant concluded
Question 7 The philosopher who believed we
are born with innate “categories of understanding” was:
Question 8 By “noumena” Kant is referring
to
Question 9 According to Plato, the process
by which we know things in the world is called:
Question 10 Plato develops the traditional
view of knowledge in one particular book of his. What is the title of that
specific book by Plato? (Note: “Complete Works” is not the answer.)
Question 11 Gettier examples are aimed at
showing that JTB is not a necessary condition of truth.
Question 12 A sufficient condition is:
Question 13 As long as justification is
present, one can be assured that he/she has real knowledge.
Question 14 The study of epistemology has
had positive impact of which of the following?
Question 15 Even after the Gettier problem,
Dew and Foreman think that JTB is still at least a necessary condition for
knowledge.
Question 16 Pragmatism is epistemologically
valuable for us since it helps us test truth claims.
Question 17 Tests for truth are meant to
define the nature of truth itself.
Question 18 Which of the following is not
one of the reasons Dew and Foreman give to show that truth really does exist.
Question 19 The correspondence theory of
truth is thought by some philosophers to be a pretheoretic intuition that we
philosophize with, not to.
Question 20 Antirealist Postmodern
thinkers say that reality does not exist.
Question 1 By “Form” Plato is referring to
the particular shape of an object of experience.
Question 2 Plato was hesitant to build a
theory of knowledge on the physical world because
Question 3 Descartes believed that all men
were born a tabula rasa.
Question 4 Knowledge arrived at
immediately:
Question 5 For Locke, which of the ideas
below would be a complex idea:
Question 6 The type of knowledge
epistemology is primarily concerned with:
Question 7 The philosopher who believed we
are born with innate “categories of understanding” was:
Question 8 The basis for Descartes
knowledge of the material world was:
Question 9 In the end Kant concluded
Question 10 Plato develops the traditional
view of knowledge in one particular book of his. What is the title of that
specific book by Plato? (Note: “Complete Works” is not the answer.)
Question 11 The primary problem with
Thales’ view of the earth is that he lacked justification for his belief.
Question 12 Gettier examples are aimed at
showing that JTB is not a necessary condition of truth.
Question 13 Gettier Problems show that:
Question 14 As long as justification is
present, one can be assured that he/she has real knowledge.
Question 15 Even after the Gettier problem,
Dew and Foreman think that JTB is still at least a necessary condition for
knowledge.
Question 16 Antirealist Postmodern thinkers
say that reality does not exist.
Question 17 Which of the following has been
the dominant theory of truth for most of history?
Question 18 The correspondence theory of
truth holds that statements are true when they correspond to the real state of
affairs in the world.
Question 19 Postmodern antirealism argues
that our perception comes to us through the subjective filters of our minds.
Question 20 Pragmatism is epistemologically
valuable for us since it helps us test truth claims.
Question 1 Plato’s forms exist apart from
the physical objects that they represent in the world experienced by our
senses.
Question 2 Which of the following
represents the key difference in thought from Descartes to Bacon?
Question 3 For Hume, which of the following
would be a matter of fact:
Question 4 For Plato, the realm where
things are constantly in a flux and changing is:
Question 5 According to Hume, why can we
never arrive at certainty?
Question 6 “To affirm that something as
true in a propositional form” is the definition of
Question 7 The elements of a proposition
include:
Question 8 The type of knowledge
epistemology is primarily concerned with:
Question 9 Rationalism holds that all
knowledge is arrived at through the reason and rejects any use of the senses at
all.
Question 10 Plato develops the traditional
view of knowledge in one particular book of his. What is the title of that
specific book by Plato? (Note: “Complete Works” is not the answer.)
Question 11 Knowledge has traditionally
been defined as Justified, true, opinion.
Question 12 Even after the Gettier problem,
Dew and Foreman think that JTB is still at least a necessary condition for
knowledge.
Question 13 The problem with “True Opinion”
is that:
Question 14 In order to count as knowledge,
there must be some form of justification for the claim.
Question 15 Dew and Foreman claim that one
minor concern with JTB is that the line between justification and truth seems a
bit vague.
Question 16 Pragmatist theories of truth
focus mostly how well a set of belief “work” for a particular person.
Question 17 Which of the following has been
the dominant theory of truth for most of history?
Question 18 Tests for truth are meant to
define the nature of truth itself.
Question 19 Coherentism uses which metaphor
to illustrate how our beliefs relate to each other?
Question 20 Definitions of truth tell us
the best ways to identify truth.
No comments:
Post a Comment