Deck 7: Freedom

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Question
Soft determinists agree with determinists that if we knew everything,we could predict a person's actions with certainty (or at least,a very high probability).
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Question
If we assume the self is a social entity that depends on others for its existence,then what will count as freedom will necessarily involve our relationships with others.
Question
Freedom is always a good thing for those who have it.
Question
When Immanuel Kant said that"Ought implies can," he meant that without freedom there could be no morality.
Question
Indeterminism implies that while all events have causes,choices and actions are not really events in the world.
Question
Even if indeterminists are right in claiming that it is impossible to predict what a subatomic particle in our bodies might do,this does not imply that it is impossible to predict what our bodies will do.
Question
To have chosen A means that one could have chosen B.
Question
The French Newtonian philosopher Pierre-Simon de Laplace argued that determinism must be false,as it's impossible to predict the future.
Question
Both determinists and compatibilists agree that consciousness can intrude on the physical order of causes and effects,without being part of that order.
.
Question
Capricious freedom is the opposite of rational freedom.
Question
A good example of rational freedom is the freedom to express your emotions.
Question
The strongest version of determinism implies that "Every event has its sufficient natural explanatory cause(s)."
Question
In Dostoevsky's story of the Grand Inquisitor in The Brothers Karamazov,after Jesus returns to earth,he is arrested by the Grand Inquisitor because he offered people the path of freedom.
Question
David Hume accepted the basic rule of determinism,the principle of universal causation,but argued that our belief in it was a matter of custom.
Question
A libertarian,Jim assumes freedom is exclusively negative freedom from interference by government agencies and other people.This leads to the absurd conclusion that the person who is most free is the person out in the middle of the desert,safely out of range of interference from the government and other people.
Question
The notion that there is a cause for every event is inconsistent seems to imply the belief that a truly free action is one that is wholly undetermined by anything but the pure self.
Question
An indeterminist view of free actions is similar to the concept of capricious freedom.
Question
Aristotle rejected soft determinism although he embraced the idea of free action.
Question
Someone who believes in soft determinism also believes that human beings are not responsible for their actions.
Question
According to the African Yoruba philosophy,prior to being born,people know what sort of "ori" or soul they will have,and hence whether they will have good or bad luck in their lives.
Question
If indeterminism is true,and there are uncaused actions,then those actions

A) must be accomplished by something resembling Descartes thinking substance.
B) fulfill the requirements for positive freedom.
C) are truly free.
D) are not truly free,as freedom requires our choices to effectively cause our actions.
Question
Kant's position on freedom is really a form of compatibilism.
Question
One reason the determinist's claim that every event has a sufficient explanation seems hard to disagree with is that

A) it implies that negative freedom is possible.
B) it implies that positive freedom is possible.
C) it appears to be a basic presupposition of knowledge.
D) it was embraced by Plato.
Question
One implication of the Heisenberg Principle of Uncertainty is that

A) it is impossible to predict what the future is on a sub-atomic level.
B) it is possible to predict the future,but only assuming human beings have an immaterial soul.
C) determinism is true.
D) causation is a fiction.
Question
Rational freedom implies

A) being able to do what you want when you want it.
B) attaining happiness.
C) only negative freedom.
D) carefully planned and thoroughly thought out actions.
Question
Jean-Paul Sartre and the psychiatrist Erich Fromm both argue that

A) until we can prove the existence of free will,we will not be truly free.
B) freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose.
C) we all try to "escape from freedom" because we find it too painful.
D) we all try to escape from the fact that we are not free.
Question
According to Kant,when we act we have to think of ourselves as acting freely.
Question
"The only liberty which can be a real thing [is] the liberty of the State and of the individual within the State" was stated by

A) Karl Marx.
B) Patrick Henry.
C) Benito Mussolini
D) John Locke.
Question
According to Sartre,there are extreme circumstances,such as war,where your freedom is eliminated or totally absent.
Question
After Eric talks to a psychiatrist,he understands that his panic attacks are the result of an imbalance of neurochemicals in his brain.According to Kant,when Eric does this he is assuming a practical stance on himself.
Question
In focusing exclusively on negative freedom,we can easily

A) become emotionally negative.
B) lose sight of what we want that freedom for.
C) lose our religious faith.
D) achieve happiness.
Question
For philosophers who define determinism as implying only predictability on the basis of probability,to say that every event is determined means only that

A) it is not predictable even when we know about earlier conditions.
B) it is predictable if we know
Enough about earlier conditions.
C) past causal conditions cannot be known.
D) the future is entirely unpredictable.
Question
According to Frithjof Bergmann our culture

A) has a deterministic view of freedom.
B) does not really believe in freedom.
C) has a single view of freedom.
D) has a schizophrenic view of freedom.
Question
In the statement "Every event has its sufficient natural explanatory cause(s)," the word "sufficient" indicates that the cause is

A) incapable of bringing the event about by itself.
B) capable of bringing the event about by itself.
C) necessary for the event to occur.
D) indeterminant.
Question
In the history of the United States,the emergence of freedom of personal choice has

A) threatened and sometimes destroyed the peaceful harmony of conformist communities.
B) nearly always resulted in benefits for all.
C) nearly always resulted in a lessening of social conflict.
D) never been achieved.
Question
If having a choice means to be able to do either A or B,then determinism seems to imply

A) there is no real choice.
B) freedom of choice is an achievement.
C) positive freedom.
D) negative freedom.
Question
When Rousseau argued that people should be forced to be free (by being made to "obey the general will" of the people),he was endorsing

A) negative freedom.
B) positive freedom.
C) the freedom from constraints.
D) the end of real freedom.
Question
People who conceive of the self as an isolated individual self,will typically view freedom as

A) freedom from other people and society.
B) freedom for some specific end.
C) positive freedom.
D) illusory and unattainable.
Question
Jean-Paul Sartre rejects Kant's notion that we must view our actions as free.
Question
If a man holds a gun to my head and forces me to give him my wallet,then

A) I am not free.
B) I have no choice.
C) I am only negatively free.
D) I have nonetheless freely chosen not to fight and be shot.
Question
Aristotle argued that an act could be free only if it was both free from "external compulsion" and

A) divinely mandated.
B) not determined by past actions.
C) performed for morally acceptable reasons.
D) free of ignorance (where the actor didn't know what he or she was doing)
Question
Suppose someone offers Anne a cigarette after she has decided to give up smoking.According to Kant,Anne

A) must think of her choice in a deterministic way.
B) must try to predict her own behavior.
C) must make a decision whether to accept it or not.
D) cannot freely choose.
Question
Why do determinists believe that no choices are free?
Question
What is the difference between negative freedom and positive freedom?
Question
Kant argued that whether we are free depends on our standpoint,and that we can adopt two different standpoints toward the world:

A) a theoretical standpoint where freedom is possible,and a practical one,where freedom is impossible.
B) a theoretical standpoint where freedom is impossible,and a practical one,where freedom is possible.
C) a theoretical standpoint and a practical one,both making freedom impossible.
D) a monistic standpoint or pluralistic standpoint,both making freedom possible.
Question
What is the difference between intrinsic and extrinsic freedom?
Question
Briefly explain Aristotle's two conditions for a free action.
Question
When Sartre said that "We were never more free than during the German occupation" he meant that

A) the occupied people confronted the fact of their freedom and the need to make a commitment.
B) the occupied people were able to escape from their everyday concerns and relationships.
C) soft determinism is true.
D) soft determinism is false.
Question
Assume that determinism is true about your body's movements.Assume also that your consciousness,unlike your body,is not part of the scheme of determinism,and so is free to make decisions,free to choose what to do.If these assumptions are true,then it follows that

A) only rational freedom is possible.
B) your consciousness cannot have an effect on the body's movements and actions.
C) your consciousness can have an effect on the body's movements or actions.
D) determinism is true even of your consciousness.
Question
What is the difference between rational and emotional freedom?
Question
Soft determinists believe that

A) determinism is false.
B) determinism has many therapeutic remedies that can help us cope with difficult times.
C) freedom and determinism are compatible.
D) freedom and determinism are incompatible.
Question
David Hume,who was a soft determinist,believed that we could say that an act was free

A) so long as indeterminism was true.
B) if it followed from a person's "character."
C) so long as its past causes were not sufficient to produce it.
D) the person performing it was not morally blameworthy.
Question
What is indeterminism?
Question
What does Jean-Paul Sartre mean when he says we are "condemned to be free?"
Question
What is the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle?
Question
Existentialists agree with Kant in asserting that

A) determinism is false.
B) soft determinism is false.
C) even if determinism is false,we must take the tragic view of ourselves as necessarily unfree.
D) even if determinism is true,we must always view ourselves as agents as necessarily free.
Question
If soft determinism is true,then

A) we can continue to hold people responsible for their actions,even if their actions are determined.
B) we cannot continue to hold people responsible for their actions because their actions are determined.
C) we must accept the fact that we have no control over our actions.
D) we must accept the fact that we are unable to act freely.
Question
The statement we are "condemned to be free" was made by

A) John Stuart Mill.
B) Immanuel Kant.
C) Jean-Paul Sartre.
D) David Hume.
Question
What does Kant mean when he says freedom is a postulate of practical reason?
Question
What is compatibilism?
Question
It's clear that the concepts of moral responsibility and freedom are linked.Consider the following four cases:

A)Dave was having an affair with Todd's wife Ethel and wanted her husband out of the way.After weeks of planning and stalking Todd,Dave shot and killed him as Todd left the gym.
B)One night in a bar,Dave had way too much to drink.He got into a vicious argument with Todd,who was also drunk and verbally abusive.In a state of alcoholic rage,Dave went to his car,got a gun,and came back to shoot Todd.
C)Dave,a combat veteran,was suffering severe conditions of PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder).Waking up from a blackout,he hallucinated that he was on the battlefield and that Todd was the enemy.Thinking he was acting in self-defense,he shot and killed Todd.
D)Dave is kidnapped by terrorists and told that unless he cooperates with them in attacking and possibly killing innocent civilians,his family will be killed.
Now write an essay in which you imagine you are on a jury charged with assessing Dave's guilt or innocence in each case,where guilt implies being morally and legally responsible.Applying Aristotle's two criteria for free actions,how would you assess Dave's guilt or innocence in each case,and why?
If more information is needed,what is that information and would its provision help you decide the case?
Can you think of any other cases that serve as interesting test applications of Aristotle's framework?
What general conclusions can you draw about the relationship between freedom and moral responsibility?
Question
Write an essay on the problem of free will and determinism.
Your essay should clarify what the problem is,and discuss various solutions to the problem: determinism (including the argument for determinism); indeterminism,compatibilism and soft determinism (both forms); and both Kant and Sartre's views on freedom.
Focus on the strength and weaknesses of each approach regarding how well they each address moral responsibility.
Do you favor one approach over others,and why?
Question
Suppose for a minute that true freedom is positive freedom.
Write an essay discussing the ingredients in,and conditions for,positive freedom.
You'll want to distinguish positive freedom from negative freedom,and to address the following questions:
What are the factors that limit and "open up" positive free choice?
Are there particular kinds of ends that must be pursued and that when absent limit your freedom?
What conditions have to be in place,in your life,for you to be positively free?
Are there some ways of choosing goals (and means toward goals)that are more or less sustainable and livable?
Give examples illustrating both choices that are more positively free and choices that are less positively free.
Question
What is freedom?
Why is it important?
Is it an absolute or conditional value?
In what sense is freedom necessary (or not necessary)for a good life?
Your essay should clarify the meaning of freedom,distinguishing among the following kinds of freedom (intrinsic,extrinsic,positive,negative,rational,emotional,capricious)while clarifying what circumstances these forms of freedom are desirable or undesirable.
Question
Write an argumentative essay defending or criticizing determinism.Your essay should address the argument for determinism,and why (or why not)it is defensible.
If you defend determinism,you'll need also to address indeterminist and soft determinist counterarguments.
Conversely,if you defend either indeterminism or soft determinism,you'll need to consider how a determinist is likely to respond.
You can use materials from chapter seven,but are not limited to these.
Question
Write a fictional,argumentative dialogue between two or more characters debating the meaning of freedom and the problem of freedom and determinism.
Your characters should each take stands and defend them with clearly stated reasons.
They can respectfully disagree with one another,and should try to address each other's criticisms.
Be especially aware of the assumptions that each character makes when s/he takes a stand.
Your dialogue can conclude with agreement,agreeing to disagree,or some sort of new synthesis of preliminary positions.
Dialogues should include discussion of the meaning and importance or value of freedom,and on some aspects of the debate over freedom and determinism.
They should bring out your perceptions of what's at stake in this issue.You can draw on materials from chapter seven,but you are not limited to these.
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Deck 7: Freedom
1
Soft determinists agree with determinists that if we knew everything,we could predict a person's actions with certainty (or at least,a very high probability).
True
2
If we assume the self is a social entity that depends on others for its existence,then what will count as freedom will necessarily involve our relationships with others.
True
3
Freedom is always a good thing for those who have it.
False
4
When Immanuel Kant said that"Ought implies can," he meant that without freedom there could be no morality.
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k this deck
5
Indeterminism implies that while all events have causes,choices and actions are not really events in the world.
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6
Even if indeterminists are right in claiming that it is impossible to predict what a subatomic particle in our bodies might do,this does not imply that it is impossible to predict what our bodies will do.
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k this deck
7
To have chosen A means that one could have chosen B.
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8
The French Newtonian philosopher Pierre-Simon de Laplace argued that determinism must be false,as it's impossible to predict the future.
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k this deck
9
Both determinists and compatibilists agree that consciousness can intrude on the physical order of causes and effects,without being part of that order.
.
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10
Capricious freedom is the opposite of rational freedom.
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11
A good example of rational freedom is the freedom to express your emotions.
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12
The strongest version of determinism implies that "Every event has its sufficient natural explanatory cause(s)."
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13
In Dostoevsky's story of the Grand Inquisitor in The Brothers Karamazov,after Jesus returns to earth,he is arrested by the Grand Inquisitor because he offered people the path of freedom.
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k this deck
14
David Hume accepted the basic rule of determinism,the principle of universal causation,but argued that our belief in it was a matter of custom.
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15
A libertarian,Jim assumes freedom is exclusively negative freedom from interference by government agencies and other people.This leads to the absurd conclusion that the person who is most free is the person out in the middle of the desert,safely out of range of interference from the government and other people.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
16
The notion that there is a cause for every event is inconsistent seems to imply the belief that a truly free action is one that is wholly undetermined by anything but the pure self.
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k this deck
17
An indeterminist view of free actions is similar to the concept of capricious freedom.
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k this deck
18
Aristotle rejected soft determinism although he embraced the idea of free action.
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19
Someone who believes in soft determinism also believes that human beings are not responsible for their actions.
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20
According to the African Yoruba philosophy,prior to being born,people know what sort of "ori" or soul they will have,and hence whether they will have good or bad luck in their lives.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
If indeterminism is true,and there are uncaused actions,then those actions

A) must be accomplished by something resembling Descartes thinking substance.
B) fulfill the requirements for positive freedom.
C) are truly free.
D) are not truly free,as freedom requires our choices to effectively cause our actions.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
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22
Kant's position on freedom is really a form of compatibilism.
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23
One reason the determinist's claim that every event has a sufficient explanation seems hard to disagree with is that

A) it implies that negative freedom is possible.
B) it implies that positive freedom is possible.
C) it appears to be a basic presupposition of knowledge.
D) it was embraced by Plato.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
One implication of the Heisenberg Principle of Uncertainty is that

A) it is impossible to predict what the future is on a sub-atomic level.
B) it is possible to predict the future,but only assuming human beings have an immaterial soul.
C) determinism is true.
D) causation is a fiction.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
25
Rational freedom implies

A) being able to do what you want when you want it.
B) attaining happiness.
C) only negative freedom.
D) carefully planned and thoroughly thought out actions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Jean-Paul Sartre and the psychiatrist Erich Fromm both argue that

A) until we can prove the existence of free will,we will not be truly free.
B) freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose.
C) we all try to "escape from freedom" because we find it too painful.
D) we all try to escape from the fact that we are not free.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
According to Kant,when we act we have to think of ourselves as acting freely.
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k this deck
28
"The only liberty which can be a real thing [is] the liberty of the State and of the individual within the State" was stated by

A) Karl Marx.
B) Patrick Henry.
C) Benito Mussolini
D) John Locke.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
According to Sartre,there are extreme circumstances,such as war,where your freedom is eliminated or totally absent.
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k this deck
30
After Eric talks to a psychiatrist,he understands that his panic attacks are the result of an imbalance of neurochemicals in his brain.According to Kant,when Eric does this he is assuming a practical stance on himself.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
In focusing exclusively on negative freedom,we can easily

A) become emotionally negative.
B) lose sight of what we want that freedom for.
C) lose our religious faith.
D) achieve happiness.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
For philosophers who define determinism as implying only predictability on the basis of probability,to say that every event is determined means only that

A) it is not predictable even when we know about earlier conditions.
B) it is predictable if we know
Enough about earlier conditions.
C) past causal conditions cannot be known.
D) the future is entirely unpredictable.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
According to Frithjof Bergmann our culture

A) has a deterministic view of freedom.
B) does not really believe in freedom.
C) has a single view of freedom.
D) has a schizophrenic view of freedom.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
In the statement "Every event has its sufficient natural explanatory cause(s)," the word "sufficient" indicates that the cause is

A) incapable of bringing the event about by itself.
B) capable of bringing the event about by itself.
C) necessary for the event to occur.
D) indeterminant.
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k this deck
35
In the history of the United States,the emergence of freedom of personal choice has

A) threatened and sometimes destroyed the peaceful harmony of conformist communities.
B) nearly always resulted in benefits for all.
C) nearly always resulted in a lessening of social conflict.
D) never been achieved.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
If having a choice means to be able to do either A or B,then determinism seems to imply

A) there is no real choice.
B) freedom of choice is an achievement.
C) positive freedom.
D) negative freedom.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
When Rousseau argued that people should be forced to be free (by being made to "obey the general will" of the people),he was endorsing

A) negative freedom.
B) positive freedom.
C) the freedom from constraints.
D) the end of real freedom.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
People who conceive of the self as an isolated individual self,will typically view freedom as

A) freedom from other people and society.
B) freedom for some specific end.
C) positive freedom.
D) illusory and unattainable.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Jean-Paul Sartre rejects Kant's notion that we must view our actions as free.
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k this deck
40
If a man holds a gun to my head and forces me to give him my wallet,then

A) I am not free.
B) I have no choice.
C) I am only negatively free.
D) I have nonetheless freely chosen not to fight and be shot.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Aristotle argued that an act could be free only if it was both free from "external compulsion" and

A) divinely mandated.
B) not determined by past actions.
C) performed for morally acceptable reasons.
D) free of ignorance (where the actor didn't know what he or she was doing)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Suppose someone offers Anne a cigarette after she has decided to give up smoking.According to Kant,Anne

A) must think of her choice in a deterministic way.
B) must try to predict her own behavior.
C) must make a decision whether to accept it or not.
D) cannot freely choose.
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43
Why do determinists believe that no choices are free?
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44
What is the difference between negative freedom and positive freedom?
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45
Kant argued that whether we are free depends on our standpoint,and that we can adopt two different standpoints toward the world:

A) a theoretical standpoint where freedom is possible,and a practical one,where freedom is impossible.
B) a theoretical standpoint where freedom is impossible,and a practical one,where freedom is possible.
C) a theoretical standpoint and a practical one,both making freedom impossible.
D) a monistic standpoint or pluralistic standpoint,both making freedom possible.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
46
What is the difference between intrinsic and extrinsic freedom?
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47
Briefly explain Aristotle's two conditions for a free action.
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48
When Sartre said that "We were never more free than during the German occupation" he meant that

A) the occupied people confronted the fact of their freedom and the need to make a commitment.
B) the occupied people were able to escape from their everyday concerns and relationships.
C) soft determinism is true.
D) soft determinism is false.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Assume that determinism is true about your body's movements.Assume also that your consciousness,unlike your body,is not part of the scheme of determinism,and so is free to make decisions,free to choose what to do.If these assumptions are true,then it follows that

A) only rational freedom is possible.
B) your consciousness cannot have an effect on the body's movements and actions.
C) your consciousness can have an effect on the body's movements or actions.
D) determinism is true even of your consciousness.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
50
What is the difference between rational and emotional freedom?
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51
Soft determinists believe that

A) determinism is false.
B) determinism has many therapeutic remedies that can help us cope with difficult times.
C) freedom and determinism are compatible.
D) freedom and determinism are incompatible.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
David Hume,who was a soft determinist,believed that we could say that an act was free

A) so long as indeterminism was true.
B) if it followed from a person's "character."
C) so long as its past causes were not sufficient to produce it.
D) the person performing it was not morally blameworthy.
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Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
53
What is indeterminism?
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54
What does Jean-Paul Sartre mean when he says we are "condemned to be free?"
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55
What is the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle?
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56
Existentialists agree with Kant in asserting that

A) determinism is false.
B) soft determinism is false.
C) even if determinism is false,we must take the tragic view of ourselves as necessarily unfree.
D) even if determinism is true,we must always view ourselves as agents as necessarily free.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
If soft determinism is true,then

A) we can continue to hold people responsible for their actions,even if their actions are determined.
B) we cannot continue to hold people responsible for their actions because their actions are determined.
C) we must accept the fact that we have no control over our actions.
D) we must accept the fact that we are unable to act freely.
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58
The statement we are "condemned to be free" was made by

A) John Stuart Mill.
B) Immanuel Kant.
C) Jean-Paul Sartre.
D) David Hume.
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59
What does Kant mean when he says freedom is a postulate of practical reason?
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60
What is compatibilism?
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61
It's clear that the concepts of moral responsibility and freedom are linked.Consider the following four cases:

A)Dave was having an affair with Todd's wife Ethel and wanted her husband out of the way.After weeks of planning and stalking Todd,Dave shot and killed him as Todd left the gym.
B)One night in a bar,Dave had way too much to drink.He got into a vicious argument with Todd,who was also drunk and verbally abusive.In a state of alcoholic rage,Dave went to his car,got a gun,and came back to shoot Todd.
C)Dave,a combat veteran,was suffering severe conditions of PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder).Waking up from a blackout,he hallucinated that he was on the battlefield and that Todd was the enemy.Thinking he was acting in self-defense,he shot and killed Todd.
D)Dave is kidnapped by terrorists and told that unless he cooperates with them in attacking and possibly killing innocent civilians,his family will be killed.
Now write an essay in which you imagine you are on a jury charged with assessing Dave's guilt or innocence in each case,where guilt implies being morally and legally responsible.Applying Aristotle's two criteria for free actions,how would you assess Dave's guilt or innocence in each case,and why?
If more information is needed,what is that information and would its provision help you decide the case?
Can you think of any other cases that serve as interesting test applications of Aristotle's framework?
What general conclusions can you draw about the relationship between freedom and moral responsibility?
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62
Write an essay on the problem of free will and determinism.
Your essay should clarify what the problem is,and discuss various solutions to the problem: determinism (including the argument for determinism); indeterminism,compatibilism and soft determinism (both forms); and both Kant and Sartre's views on freedom.
Focus on the strength and weaknesses of each approach regarding how well they each address moral responsibility.
Do you favor one approach over others,and why?
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63
Suppose for a minute that true freedom is positive freedom.
Write an essay discussing the ingredients in,and conditions for,positive freedom.
You'll want to distinguish positive freedom from negative freedom,and to address the following questions:
What are the factors that limit and "open up" positive free choice?
Are there particular kinds of ends that must be pursued and that when absent limit your freedom?
What conditions have to be in place,in your life,for you to be positively free?
Are there some ways of choosing goals (and means toward goals)that are more or less sustainable and livable?
Give examples illustrating both choices that are more positively free and choices that are less positively free.
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64
What is freedom?
Why is it important?
Is it an absolute or conditional value?
In what sense is freedom necessary (or not necessary)for a good life?
Your essay should clarify the meaning of freedom,distinguishing among the following kinds of freedom (intrinsic,extrinsic,positive,negative,rational,emotional,capricious)while clarifying what circumstances these forms of freedom are desirable or undesirable.
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65
Write an argumentative essay defending or criticizing determinism.Your essay should address the argument for determinism,and why (or why not)it is defensible.
If you defend determinism,you'll need also to address indeterminist and soft determinist counterarguments.
Conversely,if you defend either indeterminism or soft determinism,you'll need to consider how a determinist is likely to respond.
You can use materials from chapter seven,but are not limited to these.
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66
Write a fictional,argumentative dialogue between two or more characters debating the meaning of freedom and the problem of freedom and determinism.
Your characters should each take stands and defend them with clearly stated reasons.
They can respectfully disagree with one another,and should try to address each other's criticisms.
Be especially aware of the assumptions that each character makes when s/he takes a stand.
Your dialogue can conclude with agreement,agreeing to disagree,or some sort of new synthesis of preliminary positions.
Dialogues should include discussion of the meaning and importance or value of freedom,and on some aspects of the debate over freedom and determinism.
They should bring out your perceptions of what's at stake in this issue.You can draw on materials from chapter seven,but you are not limited to these.
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