Deck 2: The Legacy of Ancient Greece Eea-323 Bce

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Question
During what evolutionary psychologists call the Era of Evolutionary Adaptation, it appears that H. Sapiens most important adaptation was not upright posture or a tool using grip, but rather _________.

A) written language
B) the invention of trade and money
C) folk psychology
D) the democratic state
Use Space or
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to flip the card.
Question
In the Era of Evolutionary Adaptation early humans traveled in small bands, and mostly formed short-term mating and parenting bonds. This way of life changed:

A) with tool use.
B) with agriculture
C) with war
D) with the founding of ancient Greece
Question
Evolutionary theorists could argue that human nature is pre-adapted for the postmodern lifestyle. The reason(s) being:

A) only a tiny fraction of people are farmers.
B) people don't have to live in one place anymore
C) people can download apps and software as needed.
D) all of these.
Question
The author of the text recalls that his experience in the museum with the Elgin Marbles taught him an important lesson about history. That lesson was:

A) Today we know what the Elgin Marbles mean because people usually write down ideas shared by all.
B) No one today knows what the Elgin Marbles mean as people rarely write down what they take for granted.
C) That psychology started with the inscriptions carved into the Elgin Marbles.
D) That the reasoning, emotions, and values of the early Greeks have been handed down to us today with little change.
Question
The author of the text points out that much of our early intellectual history is mysterious for several reasons. An example of this is:

A) Plato's belief that few people are capable of handling the truth about the world with the result being persecution, and destabilization.
B) Plato's belief that all people can handle the truth yet the world is so complicated most people forget what they learned and it is lost.
C) H. Sapiens were not good tool users.
D) none of the above.
Question
If one wanted to find the initial philosophical and intellectual roots of psychology then one might look to the Greek motto "___________".

A) Be wise and know the truth.
B) Man is the measure of all things.
C) E pluribus Unum.
D) Know thyself.
Question
In the psychology of the Bronze Age, persons were said to be alive if:

A) blood was circulating in their veins
B) their body was inhabited by psuche
C) their noos was still operating
D) they were capable of speech
Question
According the Bronze Age conception of moral virtue, virtue:

A) could only be achieved by warriors through prowess in battle.
B) was achieved by religious "cleansing"
C) was a state of the soul (psyche)
D) was the gift of goodness from the god Eros.
Question
Bronze Age Greeks had a word "Psuche" that is a term that includes, among other things the concept of life-spirit. However, the author of the text notes that nowhere in Homer's the Iliad and Odyssey is there a word designating __________ as there is in Western psychology.

A) romantic love.
B) mind or personality as a whole.
C) moral virtue.
D) God or gods.
Question
The most important Greek moral value was sophrosyne, which meant:

A) finding your true inner personality by asking family to help you.
B) fulfilling all your desires without exception
C) private contemplation of the gods
D) self control, the kind that springs from wisdom.
Question
Match the group to their values:
-Greek Bronze Age warriors

A) Unit coordination and egalitarian ethos
B) extreme ethos of the polis
C) individual glory won in battle
Question
Match the group to their values:
-Phalanx of soldiers called hoplites

A) Unit coordination and egalitarian ethos
B) extreme ethos of the polis
C) individual glory won in battle
Question
Match the group to their values:
-Spartans

A) Unit coordination and egalitarian ethos
B) extreme ethos of the polis
C) individual glory won in battle
Question
The city-state (polis) that carried Greek ideas to their extreme was:

A) Sparta
B) Athens
C) Melos
D) Carthage
Question
The democratic life of the Greek polis:

A) grew out of the tradition of philosophical argument that proceeded it
B) caused classical Greeks to prefer private lives led at home
C) gave rise to open systems of thought
D) led to the abolition of slavery by 400 BC
Question
Through the elenchus, Socrates aimed to create in others the mental state of aporia, meaning:

A) eternal wisdom
B) knowledge of the Gods
C) knowledge of good and evil
D) enlightened ignorance
Question
According to Socrates, some people make bad choices because they:

A) are born with an evil soul
B) are ignorant of the Good
C) have learned to hate the Good
D) possess weak wills (akrasia)
Question
The ancient Greek philosophers (e.g. Thales) were said to have established an open system of thought. Open means:

A) welcomes criticism of its ideas
B) is written down on stone tablets and the ideas are open for all to see.
C) that thinkers a free to personally attack any critics as heretics or bad people
D) none of these.
Question
The first Greek thinkers were naturalists searching for the phusis, which meant:

A) the basic underlying element out of which all things are made
B) the uniquely human soul
C) divinely inspired knowledge of True Reality
D) the philosophical study of knowledge
Question
The first Greek philosophers to say there was no single best human way of life were:

A) the Sophists
B) the Pythagoreans
C) the Neoplatonists
D) the Aristotelians
Question
Who was the Archaic Greek Philosopher that in essence told his student, "This is how I see things- how I believe things are. Try to improve upon my teaching."

A) Thales
B) Achilles
C) Elgin Marbles
D) Leahey
Question
Many of psychology's intellectual roots can be traced to Ancient Greece, yet a concept we today have, that is strikingly missing from Ancient Greece is:

A) any concept of motivation
B) the idea of a whole personality
C) a principle distinguishing the living from the dead
D) a concern with perception
Question
In text, "protopsychologists" are people who try to link psychological processes to physiological processes. The FIRST protopsychologist was:

A) Thales
B) Alcmeon
C) Plato
D) Diogenes
Question
The humanistic thesis "Man is the measure of all things" was articulated by:

A) the atomists
B) the Stoics
C) the Neoplatonists
D) the Sophists
Question
According to Socrates, a person who does an evil deed is:

A) simply ignorant of the good
B) in the grip of a wicked passion
C) possessed by an evil god or demon
D) expressing the inherently sinful nature of human beings
Question
According to Plato, a proposition is True if and only if:

A) it is spatiotemporally universal
B) provable
C) is about one of the Forms
D) all of the above
Question
Match the Platonic metaphor for knowledge to its description or implication:
-We are drawn to the Form of Beauty by first appreciating a beautiful person.

A) The Ladder of Love
B) Allegory of the Cave
C) Metaphor of the Line
Question
Match the Platonic metaphor for knowledge to its description or implication:
-We are born in a culture whose particular beliefs must be questioned and escaped from.

A) The Ladder of Love
B) Allegory of the Cave
C) Metaphor of the Line
Question
Match the Platonic metaphor for knowledge to its description or implication:
-Opinion and knowledge may be arranged in a hierarchy from images to knowledge of Forms

A) The Ladder of Love
B) Allegory of the Cave
C) Metaphor of the Line
Question
In his theory of learning as recollection, Plato says that seeing objects in this world activates innate but latent knowledge of the Forms. This proposal anticipates the later 18th century British concept of:

A) the mild passions or sentiments
B) primary and secondary properties
C) association of ideas
D) moral sense
Question
Of Aristotle's 4 causes, which one remained part of modern natural science?

A) spiritual cause
B) formal cause
C) efficient cause
D) final cause
Question
In Aristotle's treatment of human beings, what is the unique function of the human soul, or mind?

A) knowledge of universal truths
B) sexual reproduction
C) conscious experience
D) movement (i.e., behavior)
Question
Aristotle distinguished between memory and knowledge. This distinction reflects the modern distinction of:

A) short-term and long-term memory
B) implicit and explicit memory
C) procedural and declarative memory
D) episodic and semantic memory
Question
Figures such as Alcmaeon and Empedocles are called protopsychologists because they:

A) conducted the first crude psychological experiments
B) practiced psychotherapy based on philosophical ideas
C) tried to explain mental functions in terms of brain and nerve processes
D) abandoned Platonism for the scientific method
Question
Through his dialogues, Socrates brought his students to the state of "enlightened ignorance" called:

A) aporia
B) elenchus
C) eudaemonia
D) phusis
Question
Which of the following would NOT be a characteristic of Knowledge for Plato?

A) It must be true in all times and places.
B) It conforms to the transcendent Forms.
C) It must be justifiable.
D) It must be based on careful observation.
Question
In several philosophical metaphors, Plato draws an analogy between the sun and:

A) the rational soul
B) God
C) the Form of the Good
D) homoerotic love
Question
Plato proposed that learning universal concepts such as "cat" is based on:

A) observing the similarities and differences between things
B) innate knowledge from the soul's sojourn with the Forms
C) learning how one's culture chooses to categorize things
D) proper steering of the Spirited Soul
Question
Plato believed that sometimes people behave badly because:

A) they are ignorant of what the good is
B) they have lost control of their baser motives
C) they were born with bad character
D) an evil daemon possess them
Question
Aristotle distinguished four forms of causation. Applying these to explaining why a given animal is what it is (e.g., a cat as opposed to a dog), the soul fulfills all of the 4 causes EXCEPT:

A) material cause
B) formal cause
C) efficient cause
D) final cause
Question
In contrast to Plato, but anticipating today's cognitive psychology, Aristotle defined soul in terms of:

A) personal immortality
B) a separate substance (res cogitans)
C) the transcendental Form it resembles
D) the life functions it carries out
Question
According to Aristotle, people could flourish (achieve eudaemonia) only if they:

A) underwent rigorous education in ethics
B) lived in the right sort of society
C) were innately endowed with a favorable happiness set-point (arête)
D) lived in a monastery away from social affairs
Question
In response to Parmenides' rationalism arose Empedocles' empiricism, which argued that:

A) we do not perceive the world accurately
B) we possess innate ideas which must be true
C) perception creates copies of perceived objects in our minds
D) there is no physical world
Question
According to Plato, we call a cat a cat because:

A) by seeing many cats, we have figure out what they all have in common
B) we can see its essential cause
C) it resembles our innate knowledge of the Form of the Cat
D) they're cute and furry
Question
Plato's image of the soul as a charioteer driving two horses resembles to some degree parts of whose later theory?

A) Carl Roger's
B) Carl Jung's
C) Sigmund Freud's
B) Carl Jung's d. B. F. Skinner's
Question
According to Aristotle, human intellectual appetite, or wish, arises from:

A) innate ideas of right and wrong
B) our uniquely human ability to form universals
C) learning social rules of morality
D) human curiosity
Question
The doctrine that one should not invoke gods, spirits, souls, demons or the like to explain events in the world is called:

A) naturalism
B) functional analysis
C) metaphysics
D) the Socratic method
Question
Someone who thinks that soul and body are separate and distinct entities is a(n):

A) materialist
B) determinist
C) dualist
D) atomist
Question
According to Aristotle, the faculty responsible for forming and storing universal knowledge was

A) common sense
B) memory
C) imagination
D) mind
Question
Match Aristotelian soul to its function.
-vegetative soul

A) sensation
B) reason
C) nutrition
Question
Match Aristotelian soul to its function.
-animal soul

A) sensation
B) reason
C) nutrition
Question
Match Aristotelian soul to its function.
-human soul

A) sensation
B) reason
C) nutrition
Question
You buy and are about to watch The Avengers movie on DVD. Which of the following is the best example of an efficient causal explanation of a DVD of the movie The Avengers?

A) A laser cuts divots into the surface of a DVD, encoding the movie
B) the DVD disk is made of plastic
C) it's shaped like all DVDs, resembling the Form of the DVD
D) the movie and DVD were made to entertain audiences and make money for the producers, investors, and cast
Question
Aristotle explained phenomena such as the growth of a tree from a seed by:

A) appealing only to mechanistic processes inside the seed and growing tree
B) by positing purposive striving toward a goal possessed by the seed
C) pointing out the role of human nurturing in growing plants
D) likening it to a river running downhill
Question
The modern day phrase "If it feels good, do it!" summarizes the ethical doctrine of:

A) Platonism
B) Aristotelianism
C) hedonism
D) common sense
Question
Which of the following systems of thought provided the most important bridge from classical philosophy to Christian theology?

A) cynicism
B) Neoplatonism
C) epicureanism
D) humanism
Question
Plato proposed that learning universal concepts such as "cat" is based on:

A) observing the similarities and differences between things
B) innate knowledge from the soul's sojourn with the Forms
C) learning how one's culture chooses to categorize things
D) proper steering of the Spirited Soul
Question
Aristotle distinguished four forms of causation. Applying these to explaining why a given animal is what it is (e.g., a cat as opposed to a dog), the soul fulfills all of the 4 causes EXCEPT:

A) material cause
B) formal cause
C) efficient cause
D) final cause
Question
In contrast to Plato, but anticipating today's cognitive psychology, Aristotle defined soul in terms of:

A) personal immortality
B) a separate substance (res cogitans)
C) the transcendental Form it resembles
D) the life functions it carries out
Question
Summarize the argument that today's postmodern way of life looks in many respects like life in the Era of Evolutionary Adaptation, (give details).
Question
In discussing the complexity behind the history of philosophy, science and psychology the author of the text states, "Not only is the past another country- it sometimes tries to hide". Summarize the meaning of this statement and give examples.
Question
Discuss several reasons why our intellectual history from the past is mysterious.
Question
The author of the text mentions three things that humans want to know. (What is the good life? How do we achieve happiness and virtue? What are the limits on human knowledge and happiness?) Compare and contrast how the Early Bronze Age Greeks answered these questions with the later Greek Spartans.
Question
Briefly describe the Greek warrior ethos. How did it influence the development of Greek philosophy, science, and psychology?
Question
Why did the Greeks reject doing things for a profit and why was being called "a fisheater" an insult to the Greeks?
Question
Explain why the Greek system of thought is considered and open system.
Question
In what ways was Sparta the clearest and most extreme embodiment of Greek social, moral, and political values?
Question
Why were the earliest Greek philosophers appropriately called physicists? What is Naturalism and what relationship does it have with social science?
Question
Contrast Being and Becoming and Rationalism and Empiricism.
Question
How does atomism deepen the divide between Appearance and Reality? What ethical problem is raised by atomism?
Question
Why does the author call Socrates the first Modern? Why do many consider Socrates to be at the heart of the "Greek miracle"?
Question
Describe several novels features of Socrates' practice of philosophy?
Question
Explain why Plato regarded the Forms as the highest form of human knowledge.
Question
Describe any three of Plato's metaphors for knowing the Forms.
Question
Describe Aristotle's four causes and his "natural scale," with specific reference to the souls of living things.
Question
Summarize Aristotle view of the relationship between soul and body. How is it different from Plato's?
Question
Draw a diagram representing the structure of the human (sensitive and rational) soul according to Aristotle and summarize his ideas of the special and interior senses.
Question
In terms of the Greek Legacy, the Greeks affected a miracle in helping us on the road to philosophy, science and psychology. Yet today as students of psychology we no longer share all the their values and ideas. Give several examples of these points of disagreement.
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Deck 2: The Legacy of Ancient Greece Eea-323 Bce
1
During what evolutionary psychologists call the Era of Evolutionary Adaptation, it appears that H. Sapiens most important adaptation was not upright posture or a tool using grip, but rather _________.

A) written language
B) the invention of trade and money
C) folk psychology
D) the democratic state
C
2
In the Era of Evolutionary Adaptation early humans traveled in small bands, and mostly formed short-term mating and parenting bonds. This way of life changed:

A) with tool use.
B) with agriculture
C) with war
D) with the founding of ancient Greece
B
3
Evolutionary theorists could argue that human nature is pre-adapted for the postmodern lifestyle. The reason(s) being:

A) only a tiny fraction of people are farmers.
B) people don't have to live in one place anymore
C) people can download apps and software as needed.
D) all of these.
D
4
The author of the text recalls that his experience in the museum with the Elgin Marbles taught him an important lesson about history. That lesson was:

A) Today we know what the Elgin Marbles mean because people usually write down ideas shared by all.
B) No one today knows what the Elgin Marbles mean as people rarely write down what they take for granted.
C) That psychology started with the inscriptions carved into the Elgin Marbles.
D) That the reasoning, emotions, and values of the early Greeks have been handed down to us today with little change.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The author of the text points out that much of our early intellectual history is mysterious for several reasons. An example of this is:

A) Plato's belief that few people are capable of handling the truth about the world with the result being persecution, and destabilization.
B) Plato's belief that all people can handle the truth yet the world is so complicated most people forget what they learned and it is lost.
C) H. Sapiens were not good tool users.
D) none of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
If one wanted to find the initial philosophical and intellectual roots of psychology then one might look to the Greek motto "___________".

A) Be wise and know the truth.
B) Man is the measure of all things.
C) E pluribus Unum.
D) Know thyself.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
In the psychology of the Bronze Age, persons were said to be alive if:

A) blood was circulating in their veins
B) their body was inhabited by psuche
C) their noos was still operating
D) they were capable of speech
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
According the Bronze Age conception of moral virtue, virtue:

A) could only be achieved by warriors through prowess in battle.
B) was achieved by religious "cleansing"
C) was a state of the soul (psyche)
D) was the gift of goodness from the god Eros.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Bronze Age Greeks had a word "Psuche" that is a term that includes, among other things the concept of life-spirit. However, the author of the text notes that nowhere in Homer's the Iliad and Odyssey is there a word designating __________ as there is in Western psychology.

A) romantic love.
B) mind or personality as a whole.
C) moral virtue.
D) God or gods.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The most important Greek moral value was sophrosyne, which meant:

A) finding your true inner personality by asking family to help you.
B) fulfilling all your desires without exception
C) private contemplation of the gods
D) self control, the kind that springs from wisdom.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Match the group to their values:
-Greek Bronze Age warriors

A) Unit coordination and egalitarian ethos
B) extreme ethos of the polis
C) individual glory won in battle
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Match the group to their values:
-Phalanx of soldiers called hoplites

A) Unit coordination and egalitarian ethos
B) extreme ethos of the polis
C) individual glory won in battle
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Match the group to their values:
-Spartans

A) Unit coordination and egalitarian ethos
B) extreme ethos of the polis
C) individual glory won in battle
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The city-state (polis) that carried Greek ideas to their extreme was:

A) Sparta
B) Athens
C) Melos
D) Carthage
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The democratic life of the Greek polis:

A) grew out of the tradition of philosophical argument that proceeded it
B) caused classical Greeks to prefer private lives led at home
C) gave rise to open systems of thought
D) led to the abolition of slavery by 400 BC
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Through the elenchus, Socrates aimed to create in others the mental state of aporia, meaning:

A) eternal wisdom
B) knowledge of the Gods
C) knowledge of good and evil
D) enlightened ignorance
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
According to Socrates, some people make bad choices because they:

A) are born with an evil soul
B) are ignorant of the Good
C) have learned to hate the Good
D) possess weak wills (akrasia)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The ancient Greek philosophers (e.g. Thales) were said to have established an open system of thought. Open means:

A) welcomes criticism of its ideas
B) is written down on stone tablets and the ideas are open for all to see.
C) that thinkers a free to personally attack any critics as heretics or bad people
D) none of these.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The first Greek thinkers were naturalists searching for the phusis, which meant:

A) the basic underlying element out of which all things are made
B) the uniquely human soul
C) divinely inspired knowledge of True Reality
D) the philosophical study of knowledge
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The first Greek philosophers to say there was no single best human way of life were:

A) the Sophists
B) the Pythagoreans
C) the Neoplatonists
D) the Aristotelians
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Who was the Archaic Greek Philosopher that in essence told his student, "This is how I see things- how I believe things are. Try to improve upon my teaching."

A) Thales
B) Achilles
C) Elgin Marbles
D) Leahey
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Many of psychology's intellectual roots can be traced to Ancient Greece, yet a concept we today have, that is strikingly missing from Ancient Greece is:

A) any concept of motivation
B) the idea of a whole personality
C) a principle distinguishing the living from the dead
D) a concern with perception
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
In text, "protopsychologists" are people who try to link psychological processes to physiological processes. The FIRST protopsychologist was:

A) Thales
B) Alcmeon
C) Plato
D) Diogenes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The humanistic thesis "Man is the measure of all things" was articulated by:

A) the atomists
B) the Stoics
C) the Neoplatonists
D) the Sophists
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
According to Socrates, a person who does an evil deed is:

A) simply ignorant of the good
B) in the grip of a wicked passion
C) possessed by an evil god or demon
D) expressing the inherently sinful nature of human beings
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
According to Plato, a proposition is True if and only if:

A) it is spatiotemporally universal
B) provable
C) is about one of the Forms
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Match the Platonic metaphor for knowledge to its description or implication:
-We are drawn to the Form of Beauty by first appreciating a beautiful person.

A) The Ladder of Love
B) Allegory of the Cave
C) Metaphor of the Line
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Match the Platonic metaphor for knowledge to its description or implication:
-We are born in a culture whose particular beliefs must be questioned and escaped from.

A) The Ladder of Love
B) Allegory of the Cave
C) Metaphor of the Line
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Match the Platonic metaphor for knowledge to its description or implication:
-Opinion and knowledge may be arranged in a hierarchy from images to knowledge of Forms

A) The Ladder of Love
B) Allegory of the Cave
C) Metaphor of the Line
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
In his theory of learning as recollection, Plato says that seeing objects in this world activates innate but latent knowledge of the Forms. This proposal anticipates the later 18th century British concept of:

A) the mild passions or sentiments
B) primary and secondary properties
C) association of ideas
D) moral sense
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Of Aristotle's 4 causes, which one remained part of modern natural science?

A) spiritual cause
B) formal cause
C) efficient cause
D) final cause
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
In Aristotle's treatment of human beings, what is the unique function of the human soul, or mind?

A) knowledge of universal truths
B) sexual reproduction
C) conscious experience
D) movement (i.e., behavior)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Aristotle distinguished between memory and knowledge. This distinction reflects the modern distinction of:

A) short-term and long-term memory
B) implicit and explicit memory
C) procedural and declarative memory
D) episodic and semantic memory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Figures such as Alcmaeon and Empedocles are called protopsychologists because they:

A) conducted the first crude psychological experiments
B) practiced psychotherapy based on philosophical ideas
C) tried to explain mental functions in terms of brain and nerve processes
D) abandoned Platonism for the scientific method
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Through his dialogues, Socrates brought his students to the state of "enlightened ignorance" called:

A) aporia
B) elenchus
C) eudaemonia
D) phusis
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Which of the following would NOT be a characteristic of Knowledge for Plato?

A) It must be true in all times and places.
B) It conforms to the transcendent Forms.
C) It must be justifiable.
D) It must be based on careful observation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
In several philosophical metaphors, Plato draws an analogy between the sun and:

A) the rational soul
B) God
C) the Form of the Good
D) homoerotic love
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Plato proposed that learning universal concepts such as "cat" is based on:

A) observing the similarities and differences between things
B) innate knowledge from the soul's sojourn with the Forms
C) learning how one's culture chooses to categorize things
D) proper steering of the Spirited Soul
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Plato believed that sometimes people behave badly because:

A) they are ignorant of what the good is
B) they have lost control of their baser motives
C) they were born with bad character
D) an evil daemon possess them
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40
Aristotle distinguished four forms of causation. Applying these to explaining why a given animal is what it is (e.g., a cat as opposed to a dog), the soul fulfills all of the 4 causes EXCEPT:

A) material cause
B) formal cause
C) efficient cause
D) final cause
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41
In contrast to Plato, but anticipating today's cognitive psychology, Aristotle defined soul in terms of:

A) personal immortality
B) a separate substance (res cogitans)
C) the transcendental Form it resembles
D) the life functions it carries out
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42
According to Aristotle, people could flourish (achieve eudaemonia) only if they:

A) underwent rigorous education in ethics
B) lived in the right sort of society
C) were innately endowed with a favorable happiness set-point (arête)
D) lived in a monastery away from social affairs
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43
In response to Parmenides' rationalism arose Empedocles' empiricism, which argued that:

A) we do not perceive the world accurately
B) we possess innate ideas which must be true
C) perception creates copies of perceived objects in our minds
D) there is no physical world
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44
According to Plato, we call a cat a cat because:

A) by seeing many cats, we have figure out what they all have in common
B) we can see its essential cause
C) it resembles our innate knowledge of the Form of the Cat
D) they're cute and furry
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45
Plato's image of the soul as a charioteer driving two horses resembles to some degree parts of whose later theory?

A) Carl Roger's
B) Carl Jung's
C) Sigmund Freud's
B) Carl Jung's d. B. F. Skinner's
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46
According to Aristotle, human intellectual appetite, or wish, arises from:

A) innate ideas of right and wrong
B) our uniquely human ability to form universals
C) learning social rules of morality
D) human curiosity
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47
The doctrine that one should not invoke gods, spirits, souls, demons or the like to explain events in the world is called:

A) naturalism
B) functional analysis
C) metaphysics
D) the Socratic method
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48
Someone who thinks that soul and body are separate and distinct entities is a(n):

A) materialist
B) determinist
C) dualist
D) atomist
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49
According to Aristotle, the faculty responsible for forming and storing universal knowledge was

A) common sense
B) memory
C) imagination
D) mind
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50
Match Aristotelian soul to its function.
-vegetative soul

A) sensation
B) reason
C) nutrition
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51
Match Aristotelian soul to its function.
-animal soul

A) sensation
B) reason
C) nutrition
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52
Match Aristotelian soul to its function.
-human soul

A) sensation
B) reason
C) nutrition
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53
You buy and are about to watch The Avengers movie on DVD. Which of the following is the best example of an efficient causal explanation of a DVD of the movie The Avengers?

A) A laser cuts divots into the surface of a DVD, encoding the movie
B) the DVD disk is made of plastic
C) it's shaped like all DVDs, resembling the Form of the DVD
D) the movie and DVD were made to entertain audiences and make money for the producers, investors, and cast
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54
Aristotle explained phenomena such as the growth of a tree from a seed by:

A) appealing only to mechanistic processes inside the seed and growing tree
B) by positing purposive striving toward a goal possessed by the seed
C) pointing out the role of human nurturing in growing plants
D) likening it to a river running downhill
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55
The modern day phrase "If it feels good, do it!" summarizes the ethical doctrine of:

A) Platonism
B) Aristotelianism
C) hedonism
D) common sense
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56
Which of the following systems of thought provided the most important bridge from classical philosophy to Christian theology?

A) cynicism
B) Neoplatonism
C) epicureanism
D) humanism
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57
Plato proposed that learning universal concepts such as "cat" is based on:

A) observing the similarities and differences between things
B) innate knowledge from the soul's sojourn with the Forms
C) learning how one's culture chooses to categorize things
D) proper steering of the Spirited Soul
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58
Aristotle distinguished four forms of causation. Applying these to explaining why a given animal is what it is (e.g., a cat as opposed to a dog), the soul fulfills all of the 4 causes EXCEPT:

A) material cause
B) formal cause
C) efficient cause
D) final cause
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k this deck
59
In contrast to Plato, but anticipating today's cognitive psychology, Aristotle defined soul in terms of:

A) personal immortality
B) a separate substance (res cogitans)
C) the transcendental Form it resembles
D) the life functions it carries out
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60
Summarize the argument that today's postmodern way of life looks in many respects like life in the Era of Evolutionary Adaptation, (give details).
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61
In discussing the complexity behind the history of philosophy, science and psychology the author of the text states, "Not only is the past another country- it sometimes tries to hide". Summarize the meaning of this statement and give examples.
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62
Discuss several reasons why our intellectual history from the past is mysterious.
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63
The author of the text mentions three things that humans want to know. (What is the good life? How do we achieve happiness and virtue? What are the limits on human knowledge and happiness?) Compare and contrast how the Early Bronze Age Greeks answered these questions with the later Greek Spartans.
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64
Briefly describe the Greek warrior ethos. How did it influence the development of Greek philosophy, science, and psychology?
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65
Why did the Greeks reject doing things for a profit and why was being called "a fisheater" an insult to the Greeks?
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66
Explain why the Greek system of thought is considered and open system.
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67
In what ways was Sparta the clearest and most extreme embodiment of Greek social, moral, and political values?
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68
Why were the earliest Greek philosophers appropriately called physicists? What is Naturalism and what relationship does it have with social science?
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69
Contrast Being and Becoming and Rationalism and Empiricism.
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70
How does atomism deepen the divide between Appearance and Reality? What ethical problem is raised by atomism?
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71
Why does the author call Socrates the first Modern? Why do many consider Socrates to be at the heart of the "Greek miracle"?
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72
Describe several novels features of Socrates' practice of philosophy?
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73
Explain why Plato regarded the Forms as the highest form of human knowledge.
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74
Describe any three of Plato's metaphors for knowing the Forms.
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75
Describe Aristotle's four causes and his "natural scale," with specific reference to the souls of living things.
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76
Summarize Aristotle view of the relationship between soul and body. How is it different from Plato's?
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77
Draw a diagram representing the structure of the human (sensitive and rational) soul according to Aristotle and summarize his ideas of the special and interior senses.
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78
In terms of the Greek Legacy, the Greeks affected a miracle in helping us on the road to philosophy, science and psychology. Yet today as students of psychology we no longer share all the their values and ideas. Give several examples of these points of disagreement.
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