Deck 3: Appearance and Reality in Ancient India
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Deck 3: Appearance and Reality in Ancient India
1
Within the Vedas, philosophical reflections on Vedic myths, hymns, and rituals are found primarily in the
A) Sahitas.
B) Brhmaas.
C) rayakas.
D) Upaniads.
A) Sahitas.
B) Brhmaas.
C) rayakas.
D) Upaniads.
Upaniads.
2
In the Chandogya Upanisad, the god Indra finally discovers that the true self (atman), which is free from all evils, sorrows, old age and death, is
A) the body.
B) that which wanders around freely in dreams.
C) that which experiences perceptions and thoughts through the senses and mind.
D) that which undergoes dreamless sleep.
A) the body.
B) that which wanders around freely in dreams.
C) that which experiences perceptions and thoughts through the senses and mind.
D) that which undergoes dreamless sleep.
that which experiences perceptions and thoughts through the senses and mind.
3
Because the self is that which perceives the whole world, the
claims that the self
A) cannot itself be perceived.
B) is reducible to a set of biological processes.
C) is affected by the objects that it perceives.
D) is eternal and unchanging.

A) cannot itself be perceived.
B) is reducible to a set of biological processes.
C) is affected by the objects that it perceives.
D) is eternal and unchanging.
cannot itself be perceived.
4
For the Bhagavad
entails that
A) you are likely to be born as an animal in the next life.
B) after your death, you can choose what your future life will be like.
C) it is the same self which loses its body in one life and takes on a new body in its next life.
D) your karma is reset with each new reincarnation.

A) you are likely to be born as an animal in the next life.
B) after your death, you can choose what your future life will be like.
C) it is the same self which loses its body in one life and takes on a new body in its next life.
D) your karma is reset with each new reincarnation.
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5
The doctrine of karma fundamentally holds that when people perform good actions,
A) they will tend to live good lives.
B) they will experience good consequences as a causal result of those actions.
C) God will look upon them favorably.
D) they are guaranteed to become Brahmins in their next lives.
A) they will tend to live good lives.
B) they will experience good consequences as a causal result of those actions.
C) God will look upon them favorably.
D) they are guaranteed to become Brahmins in their next lives.
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6
Even if we are able to acquire whatever we desire in life, the Buddha will consider our lives to involve suffering because
A) we won't get to fully enjoy what we've acquired until we reach heaven.
B) the threat of loss and lack of control over what we've acquired causes us anxiety and unease.
C) other people will become jealous about what we've acquired.
D) we should never be complacent and should always strive to acquire more.
A) we won't get to fully enjoy what we've acquired until we reach heaven.
B) the threat of loss and lack of control over what we've acquired causes us anxiety and unease.
C) other people will become jealous about what we've acquired.
D) we should never be complacent and should always strive to acquire more.
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7
The Buddha thought that we have attachments to things because, fundamentally,
A) society conditions us to desire more and more things.
B) attachments make life worth living.
C) we are inherently selfish.
D) we have a false understanding of reality.
A) society conditions us to desire more and more things.
B) attachments make life worth living.
C) we are inherently selfish.
D) we have a false understanding of reality.
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8
According to the Buddhist doctrine of impermanence,
A) the self only exists for one lifetime, and not beyond.
B) objects exist as long they are perceived.
C) all objects are streams of momentary skandhas.
D) there is an unchanging essence to all things.
A) the self only exists for one lifetime, and not beyond.
B) objects exist as long they are perceived.
C) all objects are streams of momentary skandhas.
D) there is an unchanging essence to all things.
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9
To refute the idea that there is a self who is an autonomous author of one's actions, the Buddha cites the doctrine of
A) dependent origination.
B) karma and rebirth.
C) emptiness.
D) the Eightfold Path.
A) dependent origination.
B) karma and rebirth.
C) emptiness.
D) the Eightfold Path.
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10
To explain how someone can experience the karmic consequences of their actions in another rebirth, the Buddhists claim that
A) it is the same self which performs the action in this life and experiences the consequences of that action in its next life.
B) there is a causal connection between the bundle of skandhas that performed the action in this life and the bundle of skandhas that exists in the next life.
C) God ensures that you will experience what you deserve.
D) your experience of these consequences in another life is due to random chance.
A) it is the same self which performs the action in this life and experiences the consequences of that action in its next life.
B) there is a causal connection between the bundle of skandhas that performed the action in this life and the bundle of skandhas that exists in the next life.
C) God ensures that you will experience what you deserve.
D) your experience of these consequences in another life is due to random chance.
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11
When an enlightened person achieves the first stage of
that person
A) no longer experiences strong desires or aversions.
B) ceases to exist altogether.
C) will come back in future lives to remove the suffering of others.
D) stops experiencing any pain or pleasure at all.

A) no longer experiences strong desires or aversions.
B) ceases to exist altogether.
C) will come back in future lives to remove the suffering of others.
D) stops experiencing any pain or pleasure at all.
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12
One reason that N
uses the chariot example is to illustrate how
A) a whole is the sum collection of its parts.
B) a whole can be identified with its most essential parts.
C) there are no such things as wholes which exist over and above their parts.
D) it makes no sense at all to talk about chariots as existing in the first place.

A) a whole is the sum collection of its parts.
B) a whole can be identified with its most essential parts.
C) there are no such things as wholes which exist over and above their parts.
D) it makes no sense at all to talk about chariots as existing in the first place.
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13
Having failed to identify N
with any of his body parts or any of the five skandhas, King Milinda initially thinks that
A) N11ef258c_5011_888d_bd33_557cf2cf52f4_TBO1325_11is identical with his unchanging ?tman.
B) N11ef258c_5011_888d_bd33_557cf2cf52f4_TBO1325_11 must not exist at all, and is lying about his own existence.
C) N11ef258c_5011_888d_bd33_557cf2cf52f4_TBO1325_11 is being indecisive about his own true identity.
D) N11ef258c_5011_888d_bd33_557cf2cf52f4_TBO1325_11s being humorous.

A) N11ef258c_5011_888d_bd33_557cf2cf52f4_TBO1325_11is identical with his unchanging ?tman.
B) N11ef258c_5011_888d_bd33_557cf2cf52f4_TBO1325_11 must not exist at all, and is lying about his own existence.
C) N11ef258c_5011_888d_bd33_557cf2cf52f4_TBO1325_11 is being indecisive about his own true identity.
D) N11ef258c_5011_888d_bd33_557cf2cf52f4_TBO1325_11s being humorous.
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14
According to N
, the name "N11ef258c_5011_888d_bd33_557cf2cf52f4_TBO1325_11" is
A) a conventional designation for skandhas arranged in a certain way.
B) a totally meaningless sound.
C) used to refer to the same person across time.
D) a rigid designator.

A) a conventional designation for skandhas arranged in a certain way.
B) a totally meaningless sound.
C) used to refer to the same person across time.
D) a rigid designator.
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15
One reason why a chariot cannot be identical with all of its parts is that
A) the chariot is not reducible to its parts.
B) the word "chariot" does not refer to all of its parts.
C) the chariot supposedly has properties which the chariot-parts lack.
D) both the chariot and its parts are totally unreal.
A) the chariot is not reducible to its parts.
B) the word "chariot" does not refer to all of its parts.
C) the chariot supposedly has properties which the chariot-parts lack.
D) both the chariot and its parts are totally unreal.
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16
Against the Buddhists, the
school develops the notion of inherence to explain how
A) composite substances exist intrinsically.
B) a substance is nothing but a collection of parts arranged a certain way.
C) attributes belong to a substance intrinsically.
D) a whole can arise as a new object when its parts are combined in the right way.

A) composite substances exist intrinsically.
B) a substance is nothing but a collection of parts arranged a certain way.
C) attributes belong to a substance intrinsically.
D) a whole can arise as a new object when its parts are combined in the right way.
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17
The role of particularity (
) in the
system is to
A) distinguish general properties from individual substances.
B) represent the object of perception.
C) individuate one attribute from another.
D) mark a substance as being numerically distinct from every other substance.


A) distinguish general properties from individual substances.
B) represent the object of perception.
C) individuate one attribute from another.
D) mark a substance as being numerically distinct from every other substance.
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18
According to
, the self (
) is
A) identical with brahman.
B) composed of physical atoms.
C) a substance in which mental states like knowledge and feeling inhere.
D) a substance in which the mind or internal sense organ inheres.


A) identical with brahman.
B) composed of physical atoms.
C) a substance in which mental states like knowledge and feeling inhere.
D) a substance in which the mind or internal sense organ inheres.
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19
Which of the following is not a genuine source of knowledge (
), according to
?
A) perception
B) memory
C) testimony
D) inference


A) perception
B) memory
C) testimony
D) inference
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20
The author of the
defines perception as "not depending on language" because
A) perceptual knowledge is fundamentally ineffable.
B) acquiring perceptual knowledge does not require the ability to verbally articulate that knowledge.
C) the meanings of words are not perceptible.
D) the nature of ultimate reality cannot be captured in language.

A) perceptual knowledge is fundamentally ineffable.
B) acquiring perceptual knowledge does not require the ability to verbally articulate that knowledge.
C) the meanings of words are not perceptible.
D) the nature of ultimate reality cannot be captured in language.
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21
The method of tarka is not itself a genuine source of knowledge (
) because
A) it only suggests that a certain view is consistent with what is known to be true through a https://storage.examlex.com/TBO1325/11ef258d_102d_86b6_bd33_5710583ab75d_TBO1325_11.
B) it cannot decide which view is the most likely to be true.
C) it is only used to negate an opponent's view without establishing one's own view as correct.
D) it can only be used when there is no fact of the matter.

A) it only suggests that a certain view is consistent with what is known to be true through a https://storage.examlex.com/TBO1325/11ef258d_102d_86b6_bd33_5710583ab75d_TBO1325_11.
B) it cannot decide which view is the most likely to be true.
C) it is only used to negate an opponent's view without establishing one's own view as correct.
D) it can only be used when there is no fact of the matter.
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22
For
, the existence of desire, aversion, effort, pleasure, pain, and knowledge are inferential marks which prove the existence of
A) the self.
B) God.
C) suffering.
D) the external world.

A) the self.
B) God.
C) suffering.
D) the external world.
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23
The Vedas are composed of hymns devoted solely to the polytheistic worship of nature deities.
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24
For the
the self is eternal and ultimately identical with brahman, the single deity that comprises the whole world.

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25
The Buddha's teachings are where the notions of karma and rebirth first appear in ancient India.
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26
The Buddha taught a kind of pessimism that suggests there is no possible escape from the pervasive suffering of life.
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27
For the Buddha, one's intentions determine the moral quality of one's action.
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28
The Buddhist doctrine of non-self (
) entails that there is no entity which can constitute or belong to a person's identity or essence.

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29

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30
All Brahmanical schools of Indian philosophy agree with the
teaching that everything is identical with Brahman.

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31
According to
, a universal property of redness inheres in an individual instance of red color, the red color inheres in a substance, and all three of these entities can be perceived by our sense faculties.

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32


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33

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34
On
explanation of the
theory of testimony, someone is a trustworthy authority when that person has direct knowledge of some fact and has a desire to communicate that fact.


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35

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36
What are the reasons why the Upaniṣads claim that the self (ātman) is immortal?
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37
In what sense did early Buddhists claim that all things are impermanent (anitya)?
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38
How do the Upaniṣads and the Buddha differently understand the notions of karma and rebirth?
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39
According to Nāgasena, what are the three possible ways in which a whole could be related to its parts? Why are each of these three ways rejected by him?
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40
How are attributes different from universals in the Vaiśeṣika system? Use an example to illustrate the difference.
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41
What is an inferential mark, and what are three types of inference according to the Nyāya Sūtra? Give your own examples for each of the three types.
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42
How is the Nyāya refutation of the claim that "nothing exists" an instance of tarka?
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43
How do Vaiśeṣika and Nyāya argue from the existence of external substances to the existence of a substantial self?
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44
Explain the doctrine of karma that is common to both the Upaniṣads and Buddhism. Contrast their respective accounts of how karma and rebirth operate. Which of the two accounts do you find more justified, and do you ultimately agree with either? Why or why not?
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45
Explain what the Buddha meant by the claim that "all is suffering." Is the Buddha correct in his assessment? How is the notion of the self relevant to the Buddha's further claims about the cause of suffering? What does the doctrine of non-self prescribe for eliminating suffering? Are these prescriptions likely to cure the suffering that the Buddha has identified?
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46
Contrast Nāgasena's and Vaiśeṣika's arguments for and against the reality of wholes over and above their parts. How does Nāgasena show that wholes are ultimately unreal? How does the Vaiśeṣika notion of inherence respond to Nāgasena's challenge, and is this response successful?
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47
Choose two of the strongest arguments given by Nyāya for the existence of the self (ātman), and explain why you find them plausible. Then, consider possible objections which can be raised by Buddhists against these two arguments. Discuss whether you think Nyāya can respond to these objections, and articulate which position you think is ultimately more sound.
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