Deck 4: The Nature of Reality

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Thales was the first Western philosopher to argue that the ultimate reality was air.
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Question
If you were to embrace Spinoza's metaphysics you would also have to embrace an idea of radical freedom.
Question
Heraclitus appears to believe that underlying all change was an eternal principle,logos,which did not change.
Question
According to Huxley's Perennial Philosophy,to perceive the one divine reality underlying the world of things and lives and minds,you need to become loving,pure in heart and poor in spirit.
Question
Professional scientists universally claim it may be possible to completely explain reality in scientific terms.
Question
Kant argues that there is a way the world is and must be,but that the necessity of the world is based on structures in the human mind.
Question
Parmenides thought that the world is unreal because reality,at its core,is in flux.
Question
According to Immanuel Kant,space and time are aspects of the physical world that we discover through experience.
Question
Hegel's idealism does not envision two worlds,but a single cosmos,an all-embracing Spirit,in constant internal conflict.
Question
According to Plato,the "World of Becoming" is more real than the "World of Being."
Question
According to Bertrand Russell,even if reality is not what it appears to be,we probably still can know whether there is any reality at all.
Question
Berkeley's statement "esse est percipi" implies a form of subjective idealism.
Question
According to Democritus,although things can be created and destroyed,the atoms which they are made of can neither be created nor be destroyed.
Question
"Primitive" mythologies,which postulate spirits,demons,gods,and goddesses are similar to science,because both seek an explanation of superficial appearances in terms of a hidden reality.
Question
Because it was built on the "the will to live," Schopenhauer's metaphysics was essentially optimistic.
Question
According to Descartes,Leibniz and Berkeley,all we ever directly experience are our ideas.
Question
Plato's belief in the priority of an immaterial and eternal world,became the central thesis of Saint Augustine's philosophy; while Aristotle's view of a living,growing,goal-directed universe played an important role in the thought of Saint Thomas Aquinas.
Question
Aristotle agreed with Plato in holding that forms or substances exist in a separate world,independent of particular things in the world.
Question
According to idealism,the basis of the existence of all things is the mind (whether our own minds or the mind of God).
Question
Descartes was the first idealist.
Question
Cosmology,unlike ontology,is the study of

A) how the most real things have come
Into being.
B) how the most real things pass out of existence.
C) the cosmos.
D) what is.
Question
Spinoza begins by assuming that,because substance is ultimate and totally independent,and because substances cannot interact,there can be only one substance.
Question
We can understand Heraclitus' claim that the basic nature of reality is an "ever-living Fire" as being similar to

A) the modern view that ultimate reality is not matter but energy.
B) Einstein's general theory of relativity.
C) Democritus,in emphasizing the atoms.
D) Anaximenes' view that reality is air.
Question
Descartes and the physicist Sir Isaac Newton,embraced a teleological view of the world as Gaia.
Question
We are forced to introduce the concept of "reality" by the distinction between

A) what is material and what is spiritual.
B) what appears to be the case,and the "deeper" picture that allows us to explain it.
C) what is sacred and what is profane.
D) what is mind and what is body.
Question
The early Greek philosophers' theories were monumental because they were attempting to explain the world

A) through appealing to the moods and whims of the gods.
B) through appealing to a single divine Creator,the Demiurge.
C) in terms of an infinite number of principles.
D) in a systematic way,not by appeal to the moods and whims of invisible gods.
Question
Approaches to the question "What is real?" seem to start from two very different places,

A) science and common sense.
B) physical science and biological science.
C) science and religion.
D) folk psychology and scientific psychology.
Question
Science's discovery of a complex system of elements and subatomic particles is similar to Thales discovery of

A) water.
B) earth.
C) fire.
D) the experimental method.
Question
Charles Hartshorne and Alfred North Whitehead both developed a process philosophy that synthesized science and a mechanistic metaphysics.
Question
Plato's "myth of the cave" illustrates the point that

A) people are like cave dwellers when they attend only to physical things,not perceiving what is real directly.
B) people are like cave dwellers,in learning how to learn how to perceive true reality without much light.
C) there are three worlds: the world in the cave,the world outside of cave,and the world within the mind.
D) few can spend their entire lives in the cave.
Question
According to Eddington,the physicist sees a plank on the street as

A) a solid,unyielding object.
B) mostly emptiness,consisting in myriads of electrical charges dashing about at great speeds.
C) existing,relative to the observer.
D) God,or Absolute Spirit.
Question
According to Spinoza,substance is defined as

A) anything which is an attribute.
B) an extended thing,or body,existing independently of the mind.
C) a monad,or mind,which cannot interact with other monads.
D) that which is in itself; which means a conception of it can be formed independently of any other conception.
Question
Pythagoras thought that numbers were more real than trees and tables because

A) numbers were created by god,while trees and tables were not.
B) numbers were eternal,while trees and tables were not.
C) numbers were social constructions,while trees and tables were not.
D) numbers unlike trees and tables were composed of more basic elements.
Question
Unlike Plato,while Aristotle thought that the world most basically consisted in forms,he thought that these forms

A) were in the World of Being separate from the World of Becoming.
B) were in both the World of Being and the World of Becoming.
C) were in material substances,such as trees and people.
D) could not be known.
Question
Plato's metaphysics combines,but also reinterprets,the perspectives of

A) Anaximander,Thales and Democritus.
B) Heraclitus,Pythagoras and Parmenides.
C) Heraclitus,Aristotle and Augustine.
D) Pythagoras and Axaximenes.
Question
A problem for Descartes is that if substances are by definition ultimate and totally independent of one another,then

A) how can God create them?
B) how can we know them?
C) how can they interact?
D) how can they be real?
Question
According to Descartes,the mind and the body are substances that require one another to exist.
Question
To say that one's ontology is evaluative means that

A) it is beyond theory and argument.
B) it is a branch of ethics.
C) it is a way of weighing what is most basic to our view of the world.
D) it is subjective.
Question
Because Leibniz believed that monads are completely independent of one another and that physical substances are illusions,he was led to conclude that

A) we only actually perceive a virtual version of the world and one another.
B) we actually perceive both a virtual and a real version of the world and one another.
C) as minds,we are able,through God,to interact with physical bodies.
D) there was only one substance,God.
Question
The basic metaphysical assumption that reality is unified,is reflected in the fact that scientists always prefer the most elegant theory that ties together the most material under the simplest principle.
Question
While Immanuel Kant thought the Will was subject to human reason and so rational,Arthur Schopenhauer believed it was

A) a blind,violent force operating
Through us,provoking us to act through desires and passions.
B) rational but based on God's Will.
C) rational,but based on the passions,and not reason.
D) a pure illusion.
Question
How does a teleological view of the world differ from a mechanistic one?
Question
Give one argument for idealism.
Question
In a teleological view of the world,the world

A) is a vast network of efficient causes.
B) is a monad.
C) is like a giant machine.
D) has a telos or goal,and is continually developing toward it.
Question
What are two of the tests that are usually imposed on the notion of what is "most real?"
Question
What three things does Leibniz believe are true of monads?
Question
When Anne claims that the only things we are ever aware of are our ideas of the world,then she is one step away from

A) monism.
B) idealism.
C) empiricism.
D) materialism.
Question
Charles Hartshorne responds to the idea that God is absolutely perfect,and therefore unchangeable,by saying that

A) it is largely correct.
B) it is largely consistent with the Bible.
C) perfection as ordinarily understood excludes change.
D) perfection as ordinarily understood does not exclude change.
Question
What sorts of different realities make up the Two Worlds?
Question
By suggesting that what is most real is neither the world discovered by science nor the world believed in by religion but our social world,Hegel questioned the assumption that

A) what is real must itself be most durable and eternal.
B) what is real must itself be in process.
C) what is real is Spirit.
D) what is real changes.
Question
According to Kant,when we act and actually do something

A) we view our bodies as physical nerves and muscles.
B) we are inhabiting a purely natural world.
C) our bodies simply become the means by which we carry out our intentions,obey certain principles,achieve certain ends.
D) we can only do so after having proved the principles our actions are based on.
Question
Define ontology.
Question
According to Immanuel Kant,we live in two separate but equal worlds:

A) the world of being,and the world of becoming.
B) the world of nature,and the world of action and belief.
C) the world of sense,and the world of intellect.
D) the world of mind,and the world of body.
Question
Describe two possible solutions to Descartes' problem of how two different kinds of substances interact.
Question
Why is it impossible to draw a true triangle,and how does this lend support to Plato's theory of forms?
Question
One of the two basic assumptions of Western metaphysical viewpoints is that

A) the universe has a purpose.
B) reality is pure idea.
C) reality is somehow a unity.
D) reality is many.
Question
When Bill says that idealism must be wrong because he can touch the table and feel it directly,an idealist could respond by saying

A) Bill is right.
B) Bill is wrong because there is only substance,God.
C) Bill is wrong because when he touches the table he's only aware of his idea of the table.
D) Bill is wrong because there are both minds and bodies that interact with one another.
Question
How did the Pre-Socratics (Anaximader,Anaximenes and Heraclitus)identify the nature of ultimate reality?
Question
Briefly contrast Descartes' and Spinoza's view on substance,especially on the nature,number and interaction between substances.
Question
When Kant argues that world is constituted by us,he means that

A) modern democracies all have constitutions.
B) it is set up by us through categories our minds impose on experience.
C) reality is essentially what we as individuals decide it should be.
D) reality is essentially what different cultures determine it to be.
Question
Describe the metaphysical viewpoint of idealism.
Focus on Berkeley,Kant,Schopenhauer and Hegel,and spell out the key elements of each of their idealistic viewpoints.
Is there a central thread that runs through all idealistic metaphysics?
Focus on two metaphysical frameworks that it sharply diverges from.
What frameworks prior to idealism prepared the way for it?
What advantages and disadvantages does idealism have?
Question
Remembering that metaphysics is evaluative,complete exercise # 1,on p.107-108.
If you are inclined to add some elements to the list,go ahead and do this.
Make sure you complete the rankings honestly: they should reflect what you actually see in your life,and not simply what you'd like to believe about yourself.
Write an essay describing what you observe.
Looking at the rankings,try to assess how (if at all)your viewpoint makes the two basic assumptions of Western metaphysics: that what is basically real endures change,and that basic reality forms some kind of unity.
Does your metaphysical viewpoint resemble any of those developed in chapter four?
Question
What is a teleological metaphysics?How does it differ from a mechanistic metaphysics?
Is there anything in between a mechanistic and teleological viewpoint?
That is,can there be a non-teleological but non-mechanistic viewpoint,or are these exhaustive of all metaphysical possibilities?
Focus on six thinkers in Chapter four,and clarify the teleological,non-teleological and mechanistic dimensions of their viewpoints.
Which viewpoint do you favor and why?
Question
Describe the metaphysical views of Descartes,Spinoza and Leibniz.
Focus especially on the nature and quantity of substance,and the issue of how substances interact.
What common threads do you find in their perspectives?
How do they disagree with one another?
Which viewpoint seems strongest to you,and why?
Question
Write an essay on how the ontologies of the Pre-Socratics,Plato and Aristotle offer different interpretations of the basic reality of the world.You should focus specifically on the following themes: appearance vs.reality,change vs.stasis,materiality (or physicality)vs.immateriality.
Question
Write a fictional argumentative dialogue between two characters who disagree about what the basic nature of reality is.
The two characters can defend any metaphysical viewpoint,including ones developed in Chapter Four.
However,any option ought to be defended or criticized with arguments.
Aside from the option you are arguing for and against,your dialogue should address five other philosophers,and/or frameworks discussed in the chapter.
You can use these as a resource for arguments,or simply as a means of clarifying your viewpoint.
The dialogue can end with agreement,with agreeing to disagree,or with arriving at a new viewpoint,synthesizing their starting standpoints.
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Deck 4: The Nature of Reality
1
Thales was the first Western philosopher to argue that the ultimate reality was air.
False
2
If you were to embrace Spinoza's metaphysics you would also have to embrace an idea of radical freedom.
False
3
Heraclitus appears to believe that underlying all change was an eternal principle,logos,which did not change.
True
4
According to Huxley's Perennial Philosophy,to perceive the one divine reality underlying the world of things and lives and minds,you need to become loving,pure in heart and poor in spirit.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Professional scientists universally claim it may be possible to completely explain reality in scientific terms.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Kant argues that there is a way the world is and must be,but that the necessity of the world is based on structures in the human mind.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Parmenides thought that the world is unreal because reality,at its core,is in flux.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
8
According to Immanuel Kant,space and time are aspects of the physical world that we discover through experience.
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k this deck
9
Hegel's idealism does not envision two worlds,but a single cosmos,an all-embracing Spirit,in constant internal conflict.
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k this deck
10
According to Plato,the "World of Becoming" is more real than the "World of Being."
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
According to Bertrand Russell,even if reality is not what it appears to be,we probably still can know whether there is any reality at all.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Berkeley's statement "esse est percipi" implies a form of subjective idealism.
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k this deck
13
According to Democritus,although things can be created and destroyed,the atoms which they are made of can neither be created nor be destroyed.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
"Primitive" mythologies,which postulate spirits,demons,gods,and goddesses are similar to science,because both seek an explanation of superficial appearances in terms of a hidden reality.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Because it was built on the "the will to live," Schopenhauer's metaphysics was essentially optimistic.
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k this deck
16
According to Descartes,Leibniz and Berkeley,all we ever directly experience are our ideas.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
17
Plato's belief in the priority of an immaterial and eternal world,became the central thesis of Saint Augustine's philosophy; while Aristotle's view of a living,growing,goal-directed universe played an important role in the thought of Saint Thomas Aquinas.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Aristotle agreed with Plato in holding that forms or substances exist in a separate world,independent of particular things in the world.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
19
According to idealism,the basis of the existence of all things is the mind (whether our own minds or the mind of God).
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Descartes was the first idealist.
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k this deck
21
Cosmology,unlike ontology,is the study of

A) how the most real things have come
Into being.
B) how the most real things pass out of existence.
C) the cosmos.
D) what is.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
22
Spinoza begins by assuming that,because substance is ultimate and totally independent,and because substances cannot interact,there can be only one substance.
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k this deck
23
We can understand Heraclitus' claim that the basic nature of reality is an "ever-living Fire" as being similar to

A) the modern view that ultimate reality is not matter but energy.
B) Einstein's general theory of relativity.
C) Democritus,in emphasizing the atoms.
D) Anaximenes' view that reality is air.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Descartes and the physicist Sir Isaac Newton,embraced a teleological view of the world as Gaia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
We are forced to introduce the concept of "reality" by the distinction between

A) what is material and what is spiritual.
B) what appears to be the case,and the "deeper" picture that allows us to explain it.
C) what is sacred and what is profane.
D) what is mind and what is body.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
The early Greek philosophers' theories were monumental because they were attempting to explain the world

A) through appealing to the moods and whims of the gods.
B) through appealing to a single divine Creator,the Demiurge.
C) in terms of an infinite number of principles.
D) in a systematic way,not by appeal to the moods and whims of invisible gods.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Approaches to the question "What is real?" seem to start from two very different places,

A) science and common sense.
B) physical science and biological science.
C) science and religion.
D) folk psychology and scientific psychology.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Science's discovery of a complex system of elements and subatomic particles is similar to Thales discovery of

A) water.
B) earth.
C) fire.
D) the experimental method.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Charles Hartshorne and Alfred North Whitehead both developed a process philosophy that synthesized science and a mechanistic metaphysics.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Plato's "myth of the cave" illustrates the point that

A) people are like cave dwellers when they attend only to physical things,not perceiving what is real directly.
B) people are like cave dwellers,in learning how to learn how to perceive true reality without much light.
C) there are three worlds: the world in the cave,the world outside of cave,and the world within the mind.
D) few can spend their entire lives in the cave.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
According to Eddington,the physicist sees a plank on the street as

A) a solid,unyielding object.
B) mostly emptiness,consisting in myriads of electrical charges dashing about at great speeds.
C) existing,relative to the observer.
D) God,or Absolute Spirit.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
According to Spinoza,substance is defined as

A) anything which is an attribute.
B) an extended thing,or body,existing independently of the mind.
C) a monad,or mind,which cannot interact with other monads.
D) that which is in itself; which means a conception of it can be formed independently of any other conception.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Pythagoras thought that numbers were more real than trees and tables because

A) numbers were created by god,while trees and tables were not.
B) numbers were eternal,while trees and tables were not.
C) numbers were social constructions,while trees and tables were not.
D) numbers unlike trees and tables were composed of more basic elements.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Unlike Plato,while Aristotle thought that the world most basically consisted in forms,he thought that these forms

A) were in the World of Being separate from the World of Becoming.
B) were in both the World of Being and the World of Becoming.
C) were in material substances,such as trees and people.
D) could not be known.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Plato's metaphysics combines,but also reinterprets,the perspectives of

A) Anaximander,Thales and Democritus.
B) Heraclitus,Pythagoras and Parmenides.
C) Heraclitus,Aristotle and Augustine.
D) Pythagoras and Axaximenes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
A problem for Descartes is that if substances are by definition ultimate and totally independent of one another,then

A) how can God create them?
B) how can we know them?
C) how can they interact?
D) how can they be real?
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
According to Descartes,the mind and the body are substances that require one another to exist.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
To say that one's ontology is evaluative means that

A) it is beyond theory and argument.
B) it is a branch of ethics.
C) it is a way of weighing what is most basic to our view of the world.
D) it is subjective.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Because Leibniz believed that monads are completely independent of one another and that physical substances are illusions,he was led to conclude that

A) we only actually perceive a virtual version of the world and one another.
B) we actually perceive both a virtual and a real version of the world and one another.
C) as minds,we are able,through God,to interact with physical bodies.
D) there was only one substance,God.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
The basic metaphysical assumption that reality is unified,is reflected in the fact that scientists always prefer the most elegant theory that ties together the most material under the simplest principle.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
While Immanuel Kant thought the Will was subject to human reason and so rational,Arthur Schopenhauer believed it was

A) a blind,violent force operating
Through us,provoking us to act through desires and passions.
B) rational but based on God's Will.
C) rational,but based on the passions,and not reason.
D) a pure illusion.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
How does a teleological view of the world differ from a mechanistic one?
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k this deck
43
Give one argument for idealism.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
44
In a teleological view of the world,the world

A) is a vast network of efficient causes.
B) is a monad.
C) is like a giant machine.
D) has a telos or goal,and is continually developing toward it.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
What are two of the tests that are usually imposed on the notion of what is "most real?"
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
What three things does Leibniz believe are true of monads?
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
47
When Anne claims that the only things we are ever aware of are our ideas of the world,then she is one step away from

A) monism.
B) idealism.
C) empiricism.
D) materialism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Charles Hartshorne responds to the idea that God is absolutely perfect,and therefore unchangeable,by saying that

A) it is largely correct.
B) it is largely consistent with the Bible.
C) perfection as ordinarily understood excludes change.
D) perfection as ordinarily understood does not exclude change.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
What sorts of different realities make up the Two Worlds?
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
50
By suggesting that what is most real is neither the world discovered by science nor the world believed in by religion but our social world,Hegel questioned the assumption that

A) what is real must itself be most durable and eternal.
B) what is real must itself be in process.
C) what is real is Spirit.
D) what is real changes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
According to Kant,when we act and actually do something

A) we view our bodies as physical nerves and muscles.
B) we are inhabiting a purely natural world.
C) our bodies simply become the means by which we carry out our intentions,obey certain principles,achieve certain ends.
D) we can only do so after having proved the principles our actions are based on.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Define ontology.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
According to Immanuel Kant,we live in two separate but equal worlds:

A) the world of being,and the world of becoming.
B) the world of nature,and the world of action and belief.
C) the world of sense,and the world of intellect.
D) the world of mind,and the world of body.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
Describe two possible solutions to Descartes' problem of how two different kinds of substances interact.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
55
Why is it impossible to draw a true triangle,and how does this lend support to Plato's theory of forms?
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
One of the two basic assumptions of Western metaphysical viewpoints is that

A) the universe has a purpose.
B) reality is pure idea.
C) reality is somehow a unity.
D) reality is many.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
When Bill says that idealism must be wrong because he can touch the table and feel it directly,an idealist could respond by saying

A) Bill is right.
B) Bill is wrong because there is only substance,God.
C) Bill is wrong because when he touches the table he's only aware of his idea of the table.
D) Bill is wrong because there are both minds and bodies that interact with one another.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
How did the Pre-Socratics (Anaximader,Anaximenes and Heraclitus)identify the nature of ultimate reality?
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59
Briefly contrast Descartes' and Spinoza's view on substance,especially on the nature,number and interaction between substances.
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60
When Kant argues that world is constituted by us,he means that

A) modern democracies all have constitutions.
B) it is set up by us through categories our minds impose on experience.
C) reality is essentially what we as individuals decide it should be.
D) reality is essentially what different cultures determine it to be.
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61
Describe the metaphysical viewpoint of idealism.
Focus on Berkeley,Kant,Schopenhauer and Hegel,and spell out the key elements of each of their idealistic viewpoints.
Is there a central thread that runs through all idealistic metaphysics?
Focus on two metaphysical frameworks that it sharply diverges from.
What frameworks prior to idealism prepared the way for it?
What advantages and disadvantages does idealism have?
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62
Remembering that metaphysics is evaluative,complete exercise # 1,on p.107-108.
If you are inclined to add some elements to the list,go ahead and do this.
Make sure you complete the rankings honestly: they should reflect what you actually see in your life,and not simply what you'd like to believe about yourself.
Write an essay describing what you observe.
Looking at the rankings,try to assess how (if at all)your viewpoint makes the two basic assumptions of Western metaphysics: that what is basically real endures change,and that basic reality forms some kind of unity.
Does your metaphysical viewpoint resemble any of those developed in chapter four?
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63
What is a teleological metaphysics?How does it differ from a mechanistic metaphysics?
Is there anything in between a mechanistic and teleological viewpoint?
That is,can there be a non-teleological but non-mechanistic viewpoint,or are these exhaustive of all metaphysical possibilities?
Focus on six thinkers in Chapter four,and clarify the teleological,non-teleological and mechanistic dimensions of their viewpoints.
Which viewpoint do you favor and why?
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64
Describe the metaphysical views of Descartes,Spinoza and Leibniz.
Focus especially on the nature and quantity of substance,and the issue of how substances interact.
What common threads do you find in their perspectives?
How do they disagree with one another?
Which viewpoint seems strongest to you,and why?
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65
Write an essay on how the ontologies of the Pre-Socratics,Plato and Aristotle offer different interpretations of the basic reality of the world.You should focus specifically on the following themes: appearance vs.reality,change vs.stasis,materiality (or physicality)vs.immateriality.
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66
Write a fictional argumentative dialogue between two characters who disagree about what the basic nature of reality is.
The two characters can defend any metaphysical viewpoint,including ones developed in Chapter Four.
However,any option ought to be defended or criticized with arguments.
Aside from the option you are arguing for and against,your dialogue should address five other philosophers,and/or frameworks discussed in the chapter.
You can use these as a resource for arguments,or simply as a means of clarifying your viewpoint.
The dialogue can end with agreement,with agreeing to disagree,or with arriving at a new viewpoint,synthesizing their starting standpoints.
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