Exam 1: Philosophy and the Search for Wisdom
Exam 1: Philosophy and the Search for Wisdom63 Questions
Exam 2: The Asian Sages: Lao-Tzu, Confucius, and Buddha63 Questions
Exam 3: The Sophist: Protagoras63 Questions
Exam 4: The Wise Man: Socrates63 Questions
Exam 5: The Philosopher-King: Plato63 Questions
Exam 6: The Naturalist: Aristotle63 Questions
Exam 7: The Stoic: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius63 Questions
Exam 8: The Scholar: Thomas Aquinas63 Questions
Exam 9: The Rationalist: René Descartes63 Questions
Exam 10: The Skeptic: David Hume63 Questions
Exam 11: The Universalist: Immanuel Kant63 Questions
Exam 12: The Utilitarian: John Stuart Mill63 Questions
Exam 13: The Materialist: Karl Marx63 Questions
Exam 14: The Existentialist: Søren Kierkegaard63 Questions
Exam 15: The Pragmatist: William James63 Questions
Exam 16: The Anti-Philosopher: Friedrich Nietzsche63 Questions
Exam 17: The Twentieth Century: Ludwig Wittgenstein and Martin Heidegger63 Questions
Exam 18: Philosophy As a Way of Life63 Questions
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Metaphysics raises questions that go beyond the scope of ordinary science.
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Majority rules thinking reflects a utilitarian approach to philosophy.
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A conviction that something is true where the only evidence for this is the conviction itself is
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The belief that knowledge is determined by the specific qualities of the observer is called
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Walter Kaufman held that the history of philosophy was the history of heresy.
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