Exam 2: Theory of Knowledge

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Descartes' method can be used for proving what you already know.

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False

Descartes raises the possibility of the existence of an "evil genius" in order to demonstrate that:

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B

According to Descartes' method of doubt, we can't be certain that the moon isn't made of cheese.

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The "epistemological turn" was completed when Hume published his Essay Concerning the Human Understanding.

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Descartes' method of doubt tells us to:

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Descartes starts the application of his method of doubt by:

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A key assumption of the Cogito Argument is that, when a proposition is asserted, someone must exist to make this assertion.

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Kant believes that the categories allow us to know the world as it really is.

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Descartes says we must doubt something if there is one chance in a billion that it's false.

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The first indubitable truth Descartes discovers in the Meditations is that:

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Descartes knows, by the end of the second Meditation, that he exists as a human with a body and soul.

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Kant believed that the categories are innate in the human mind.

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The idea that the mind enters the world as a tabula rasa was first put forward by:

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Hume believes there could be events that have no causes.

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The "epistemological turn" began with Descartes.

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The two basic epistemological problems raised by Descartes were:

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According to Locke, words that don't correspond to ideas in our minds are meaningless.

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"Either 7 is odd, or 7 is not odd," is an example of the Law of Contradiction.

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Kant held that the central fact of our existence was consciousness.

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To say that an argument is valid means:

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