Pregunta 1
Pregunta
Which of the following is not a subfield of philosophy?
Respuesta
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epistemology
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metaphysics
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physics
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metaethics
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ethics
Pregunta 2
Pregunta
Epistemology addresses questions about
Respuesta
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The nature of knowledge
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Justification
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The nature of truth
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All of the above
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Both (A) and (B)
Pregunta 3
Pregunta
When is a belief that P true?
Pregunta 4
Pregunta
Person A justifiably believes that the Canadian government should legalise marijuana, whereas person B justifiably believes that the Canadian government should not legalise marijuana. From this disagreement, we can conclude that:
Respuesta
-
Either A or B is mistaken.
-
Neither A nor B is mistaken.
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Both A and B are correct, relative to their own perspective.
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There is no fact of the matter about whether the Canadian government should legalise marijuana.
-
We cannot conclude anything about this case.
Pregunta 5
Pregunta
Very often, the kinds of questions asked in philosophy
Respuesta
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Have no specific answers
-
have answers that merely express someone's opinions
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Can be answered by observational means
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Cannot be answered by observational means
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Are pointless
Pregunta 6
Pregunta
An argument is deductively valid just in case
Respuesta
-
It is impossible for the premises to be true and the conclusion to be false
-
It is possible for the premises to be true and the conclusion to be true
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It is impossible for the premises to be false and the conclusion to be true
-
It is possible for the premises to be false and the conclusion to be true
Pregunta 7
Pregunta
An argument is sound just in case
Pregunta 8
Pregunta
If the conspiracy theories are true, Neil Armstrong never really landed on the moon. Indeed, Neil Armstrong never landed on the moon because the conspiracy theories are, in fact, true.
Respuesta
-
Cogent
-
Plausible
-
Implausible
-
Valid
-
Invalid
Pregunta 9
Pregunta
If the conspiracy theories are true, Neil Armstrong never really landed on the moon. But all conspiracy theories are false. So, Neil Armstrong did, in fact, land on the moon.
Respuesta
-
Cogent
-
Plausible
-
Implausible
-
Valid
-
Invalid
Pregunta 10
Pregunta
"All grukes are toves, and all toves are outgrabes. So, there is at least a gruke that is an outgrabe." This argument is (N.B. "Grukes", "toves", and "outgrabes" are not words in English; they are nonsensical. Still, you should be in a position to answer this question.)
*NB This argument is invalid, although I intended it to be valid. So you get a mark if you answered one of these. But it is invalid since the conclusion entails the existence of something, while the premises do not. This argument is
(N.B. "Grukes", "toves", and "outgrabes" are not words in English; they are nonsensical. Still, you should be in a position to answer this question.)
Respuesta
-
Valid
-
Sound
-
Invalid
-
Unsound
-
Nonsensical
Pregunta 11
Pregunta
"If Keanu Reeves is a good actor, then I'm a monkey's uncle. Of course, I'm not a monkey's uncle: Keanu Reeves is not a good actor."
This argument is
Respuesta
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True
-
Sound
-
Valid
-
Invalid
-
Unsound
Pregunta 12
Pregunta
"Philosophy is to be studied, not for the sake of any definite answers to its questions, since no definite answers can, as a rule, be known to be true, but rather for the sake of the questions themselves; because these questions enlarge our conception of what is possible, enrich our intellectual imagination and diminish the dogmatic assurance which closes the mind against speculation; but above all because, through the greatness of the universe which philosophy contemplates, the mind is also rendered great, and becomes capable of that union with the universe which constitutes its highest good."
The conclusion of the above passage is that
Respuesta
-
No definite answers to philosophical questions can be known to be true
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Philosophical questions enlarge our conception of what is possible
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Philosophy should be studied for the sake of the questions themselves
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Philosophical questions enrich our intellectual imagination
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None of the above
Pregunta 13
Pregunta
Consider the following claims:
(1) My closet is full of old ski boots. (2) My closet is full of old things.
Which of the two is stronger, in the strict logical sense?
Respuesta
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(2) is stronger, in the strict logical sense, than (1)
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(1) is stronger, in the strict logical sense, than (2)
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(1) and (2) are logical equivalent
-
There is no strict logical relation between (1) and (2)
Pregunta 14
Pregunta
According to the principle of charity,
Respuesta
-
One should interpret an author's argument in its most favourable light
-
One should never question or doubt the conclusion of famous philosophers
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One should donate a small portion of one's annual income to a reputable charity
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One should never object to an argument whose conclusion is obviously false
Pregunta 15
Pregunta
(1) Bob Dylan wrote "Visions of Johanna". (2) America's most important singer/songwriter wrote "Visions of Johanna".
Which of the two is stronger, in the strict logical sense?
Respuesta
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(1) is stronger, in the strict logical sense, than (2)
-
(2) is stronger, in the strict logical sense, than (1)
-
(1) and (2) are logical equivalent
-
There is no strict logical relation between (1) and (2)
Pregunta 16
Pregunta
One commits the fallacy of equivocation when
Respuesta
-
One argues in a circle
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One identities two things as equals when, in fact, they are not
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One pretends to know what they are talking about when, in fact, one does not
-
One uses keywords in various senses in different parts of one's argument
Pregunta 17
Pregunta
"Begging the question" names an argumentative fallacy, according to which
Pregunta 18
Pregunta
"Abortion is morally wrong because a fetus is a human being, and killing human beings is morally wrong".
This argument
Pregunta 19
Pregunta
"Vegans will tell you that you should stop eating meat. But most vegans are idiots. We should keep eating meat."
This argument
Pregunta 20
Pregunta
Locate yourself on this map.
(N.B. This question is a freebie: You get a mark for simply trying.)
Pregunta 21
Pregunta
Moral or ethical relativism is the view according to which
Respuesta
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The truth of utterances of the form "action A done in culture C is morally wrong" is relative to the speaker
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Evaluating the norms of our culture is impossible
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The deontic status of an action A done in culture C is determined by the moral code of C
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Both B and C
Pregunta 22
Pregunta
According to the anthropological argument, what best explains the fact that different cultures have different moral codes is that
Respuesta
-
There are no moral standards or norms whose correctness or validity is independent of the moral norms a culture does or might accept, and thus they express universally valid moral standards that apply to all cultures
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Different cultures have different non-moral beliefs about the natural world
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Different strokes for different folks
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None of the above
Pregunta 23
Pregunta
The moral codes of some cultures contain basic and fundamental moral norms that conflict with the basic and fundamental moral norms that make up the moral code of different cultures, and these conflicts are widespread. This thesis is called
Respuesta
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Moral relativism
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Moral diversity thesis
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Ethical relativism
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Universality thesis
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None of the above
Pregunta 24
Pregunta
Jack promised his mother to mow the lawn first thing Sunday morning. So, Jack has a pro tanto duty to mow the lawn first thing Sunday morning. Diane, Jack's sister, made no such promise. So, Diane does not have a duty to mow the lawn first thing Sunday morning. What is the most plausible explanation for this difference in what Jack and Diane ought to do?
Pregunta 25
Pregunta
According to the moral absolutism
Respuesta
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Matters of morality are universal
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Matters of morality of absolute
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There are objective truths
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Morality does not depend on a person's desires, interests, or goals
-
All of the above
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None of the above
Pregunta 26
Pregunta
How has the view that different cultures have different moral codes been described in lecture?
Respuesta
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Moral diversity thesis
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Cultural relativism
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Descriptive relativism
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All of the above
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B and C only
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None of the above
Pregunta 27
Pregunta
Which of the following claim does not best describe ethical relativism?
Respuesta
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Different cultures have different moral norms
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The moral code of a society determines what is right and what is wrong in that society
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There is no objective and independent standard to judge the practices and institutions of other cultures
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Our moral code has no special status
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None of the above
Pregunta 28
Pregunta
According to James Rachels, the cultural differences argument for ethical relativism is
Respuesta
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False
-
True
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Valid but unsound
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Invalid
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Invalid but sound
Pregunta 29
Pregunta
Which of the following claims, according to Rachels, could someone not truly utter if ethical relativism were true?
Respuesta
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The practice of infanticide endorsed by members of my culture is morally permissible
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The practice of infanticide endorsed by members of my culture is morally impermissible
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The practice of infanticide endorsed by members of a different culture is morally permissible
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The practice of infanticide endorsed by members of a different culture is morally impermissible
-
All of the above
-
B, C, D only
Pregunta 30
Pregunta
One consequence of taking ethical relativism seriously is that
Respuesta
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Our moral views may turn out to be mistaken
-
It makes it difficult to makes sense of what seems to be commonsensical moral concepts
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All truths (not merely moral truths) are susceptible to relativity
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There can be no genuine disagreement about moral matters
Pregunta 31
Pregunta
What should be concluded from the fact that different cultures have different moral codes?
Respuesta
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None of our preferences and practices are based on some absolute and independent standard
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Not all of our preferences and practices are based on some absolute and independent standard
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All of our preferences and practices are based on some absolute and independent standard
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There is no single true morality
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We should not conclude anything from this fact
Pregunta 32
Pregunta
What could explain the fact that different cultures have different moral codes?
Respuesta
-
A difference in fundamental moral beliefs
-
A difference in non-fundamental moral beliefs
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A difference in non-moral beliefs
-
All of the above
-
None of the above
Pregunta 33
Pregunta
According to Gilbert Harman's brand of moral relativism
Respuesta
-
All moral judgments make sense only in relation to and with reference to some implicit agreement or tacit understanding about their relations with one another.
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Some, but not all, judgments make sense only in relation to and with reference to some implicit agreement or tacit understanding about their relations with one another.
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No moral judgment makes sense only in relation to and with reference to some implicit agreement or tacit understanding about their relations with one another.
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Non-inner judgements make sense only in relation to and with reference to some implicit agreement or tacit understanding about their relations with one another.
Pregunta 34
Pregunta
According to Harman, inner judgments
Respuesta
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Entail claims about what people have reasons do to
-
Typically presuppose that the speaker endorses the reasons the speaker takes the agent to have
-
Typically presuppose that the audience endorses the reasons the speaker takes the agent to have
-
All of the above
-
Entail claims about value
Pregunta 35
Pregunta
According to internalism about reasons
Respuesta
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A necessary condition for a consideration R to be a reason for agent A to do D is that R is related to A's subjective motivational set
-
A sufficient condition for a consideration R to be a reason for agent A to do D is that R is related to A's subjective motivational set
-
Both A and B
-
Neither A nor B
Pregunta 36
Pregunta
What is not considered to be part of an agent's subjective motivational set?
Respuesta
-
Beliefs
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Desires
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Values
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Intentions
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Plans
Pregunta 37
Pregunta
Suppose Juliana is a member of a community that has implicitly agreed to sacrifice each family's first-born baby in order to honour the flying spaghetti monster. If Harman's brand of moral relativism is true, which of the following claims could we not truly utter?
Respuesta
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It ought not be the case that Juliana sacrifices her first-born to honour the flying spaghetti monster
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The practice of sacrificing one's first-born endorsed by Juliana and members of her community is morally egregious
-
Sacrificing one's first-born in order to honour the flying spaghetti monster is morally wrong
-
Like every other member of her community, Juliana ought not sacrifice her first-born to honour the flying spaghetti monster
-
Both C and D
Pregunta 38
Pregunta
What primary reason does Harman offer to support his version of moral relativism?
Respuesta
-
The moral diversity thesis
-
It best explains certain aspects of our moral thought and discourse
-
Facts about how people use the words 'ought' and 'morally wrong'
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Harman doesn't offer a reason to support his version of moral relativism
Pregunta 39
Pregunta
If Harman's version of moral relativism is true, can we evaluate the moralities of different cultures or society?
Respuesta
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No, morality is relative
-
Yes, Harman's brand of relativism is sophisticated
-
I don't know, Harman's brand of relativism is inconsistent
-
I don't know, I don't fully understand Harman's brand of moral relativism
Pregunta 40
Pregunta
You get a mark simply for answering this question. You get an additional mark if you answer it correctly.
Suppose you find yourself in a strange island inhabited by knights, who always tell the truth, and knaves, who always lie. Suppose further that you stumble upon two inhabitants, Jones and Smith, but don’t know whether they’re knights or knaves. It is extremely important that you find out what they are, since only knights can help you find your way back home. So you ask them to reveal their identity. Jones states: "I and Smith are not the same". Smith replies: "There is exactly one knight among us". What are Jones and Smith?
Respuesta
-
Both Jones and Smith are knights
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Jones is a knight and Smith is a knave
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Jones is a knave and Smith is a knight
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Both Jones and Smith are knaves
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There is not enough information to determine what are Jones and Smith
Pregunta 41
Pregunta
What is the trolley problem?
Respuesta
-
Explaining why it is morally permissible in some cases to kill one person in order to save five, but not morally permissible in other cases
-
Explaining why it is morally required in some cases to kill one person in order to save five, but not morally required in other cases
-
Explaining why it is morally permissible to push a fat man over a bridge in order to stop a runaway trolley that will otherwise hit and kill five people, but not morally permissible for a transplant surgeon to kill one person in order to harvest their organs and transplant them into five dying patients
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Explaining why killing is not always worse than letting die
Pregunta 42
Pregunta
Which trolley case provides a counterexample to the principle that killing is worse than letting die?
Pregunta 43
Pregunta
According to J.J. Thomson, it is permissible to kill one person in order to save five people only if
Respuesta
-
The act consists in diverting a threat to the five onto the one
-
The act does not directly violate the one’s stringent rights
-
The act is one whose maxim is universalizable
-
Both A and B
-
None of the above
Pregunta 44
Pregunta
According to the principle of alternate possibilities, a person is morally responsible for what she has done
Respuesta
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If and only if she could have acted otherwise
-
If she could have acted otherwise
-
Only if she could have acted otherwise
-
Only if determinism is false
Pregunta 45
Pregunta
According to H. Frankfurt, what is a reason to think that the principle of alternate possibilities is true?
Respuesta
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Many people believe it to be true
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The objectivity of morality presupposes it to be true
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It is an analytic truth
-
It is a generalized version of the idea that coercion and moral responsibility are mutually exclusive
-
None of the above
Pregunta 46
Pregunta
Which of the following is a necessary condition for coercion?
Respuesta
-
There is a circumstance that makes it sufficient that someone could not have acted otherwise
-
The circumstance that makes it sufficient that someone could not have acted otherwise plays an appropriate role in explaining why you did what you did
-
both A and B
-
None of the above
Pregunta 47
Pregunta
Jones decides for reasons of his own to rig the state lottery. Then, someone threatens Jones with a very harsh penalty (so harsh that any reasonable person would submit to the threat), unless he rigs the state lottery. But Jones is not a reasonable man. Once he has decided to do something, he does it. And so Jones rigs the state lottery. Is Jones coerced into rigging the state lottery?
Respuesta
-
Jones is coerced into rigging the state lottery
-
Jones is not coerced into rigging the state lottery
-
There is no fact of the matter whether Jones is coerced into rigging the state lottery
-
Jones is coerced into rigging the state lottery but is nevertheless morally responsible for rigging the state lottery
Pregunta 48
Pregunta
Which of the cases discussed in the in-class survey is supposed to be a counterexample to the principle of alternate possibilities?
Respuesta
-
The case of Phyllis
-
The case of Dwight
-
The case of Kelly
-
The case of Meredith
Pregunta 49
Pregunta
Which of the following principles does Frankfurt believe is not susceptible to Frankfurt-style counterexamples?
Respuesta
-
A person is not morally responsible for what they have done if they did it because they could not have done otherwise
-
A person is not morally responsible for what they have done if they did it only because they could not have done otherwise
-
A person is not morally responsible for what they have done only if they were coerced to do it
-
A person is not morally responsible for what they have done if they did it as a result of working for Michael Scott
Pregunta 50
Pregunta
According to the free will thesis
Pregunta 51
Pregunta
Soft determinism is the view that
Respuesta
-
While every event in the world is causally determined, some people have free will
-
Every event in the world is causally determined, which is incompatible with the idea that some people have free will
-
Some people have free will, and that is incompatible with the idea that every event in the world is causally determined
-
Given the past and the laws of nature, the future is determined in every detail
Pregunta 52
Pregunta
According to Van Inwagen the following principle is not susceptible to Frankfurt-style counterexamples:
Respuesta
-
The principle of planned parenthood
-
The principle of plausible possession
-
The principle of possible prevention
-
The principle of plausible possibilities
Pregunta 53
Pregunta
According to Van Inwagen, the following condition(s) need(s) to be met for an example to constitute a counterexample to PPP:
Respuesta
-
The agent could not have done otherwise
-
The agent could not have prevent the event (or state of affairs) from happening (obtaining)
-
The agent is morally responsible for the event (or state of affairs)
-
Both b and c
-
None of the above
Pregunta 54
Pregunta
According to the control condition
Respuesta
-
We are morally assessable only to the extent that we what are assessed for is morally praiseworthy
-
We are morally assessable only to the extent that we could have done otherwise
-
We are morally assessable only to the extent that what we are assessed for depends on factor under our control
-
None of the above
Pregunta 55
Pregunta
Which of the following criteria is not specifically a criterion of agent-regret?
Respuesta
-
Thought directed at one’s action
-
Thought about how much better it would have been otherwise
-
Can extend beyond what one does intentionally
-
Calls for compensation or restitution on the part of the agent
Pregunta 56
Pregunta
What, according to Williams, can we not correctly say of Gauguin’s decision of leaving his family to pursue a career as a painter if i) – Gauguin fails to become a successful painter, and ii) – this failure his due to extrinsic factors (e.g. getting into an incapacitating accident on his way to Tahiti)?
Respuesta
-
Gauguin’s decision was not justified
-
Gauguin’s decision was justified
-
Gauguin’s decision was unjustified
-
Both B and C
-
None of the above
Pregunta 57
Pregunta
Which of the following is not a kind of luck discussed by T. Nagel?
Respuesta
-
Constitutive luck
-
Contributive luck
-
Resultant luck
-
Causal luck
-
Circumstantial luck
Pregunta 58
Pregunta
According to Nagel, Williams sidesteps the main question of moral luck. Rather than showing that morality is not immune to luck, Williams shows that
Pregunta 59
Pregunta
According to Nagel, the solution to the problem of moral luck is to
Respuesta
-
Accept moral luck and reject the control condition
-
Deny moral luck and revise our moral practices
-
Deny moral luck and keep our moral practices intact
-
There is no solution to the problem of moral luck
Pregunta 60
Pregunta
Suppose you find yourself on a strange island inhabited by knights, who always tell the truth, and knaves, who always lie. You meet three inhabitants: Peggy, Joe and Zippy. Peggy claims, “I am a knight or Joe is a knave.” Joe tells you, “I know that Peggy is a knight and that Zippy is a knave.” Zippy says, “I and Joe are different.”
What are Peggy, Joe, and Zippy?
Pregunta 61
Pregunta
Very roughly, the nonidentity problem consists in
Respuesta
-
The problem of trying to explain the wrongness done onto certain kinds of people that do not seem to be harmed in any kind of way
-
The problem of trying to explain why two seemingly nonidentical things are, in fact, identical
-
The problem of deriving an ‘ought’ from an ‘is’
-
The problem of deriving an ‘is’ from an ‘ought’
Pregunta 62
Pregunta
What are nonidentity cases?
Respuesta
-
A kind of thought-experiment or example
-
Persons who are caused to have necessarily flawed existence
-
Cases of two things that are not identical to each other
-
None of the above
Pregunta 63
Pregunta
Which of the following schemata is not part of the set of claims that generates the nonidentity problem?
Respuesta
-
X wrongs Y
-
The way that X wrongs Y is by causing Y harm
-
X causes Y harm by making Y worse off than Y otherwise would have been
-
Y is worse off than they otherwise would have been
-
None of the above
Pregunta 64
Pregunta
How can one go about solving the nonidentity problem?
Pregunta 65
Pregunta
According to Smolkin, how does Schwartz’s solve the nonidentity problem?
Respuesta
-
By denying that people described in putative examples of nonidentity cases are wronged
-
By denying that people described in putative examples of nonidentity cases are made worse off
-
By shifting the locus of harm from identity cases to their creators
-
All of the above
-
Both B and C
-
None of the above
Pregunta 66
Pregunta
According to Smolkin, how does Parfit solve the nonidentity problem?
Respuesta
-
By denying that people described in putative examples nonidentity cases are made worse off
-
By shifting the focus on nonidentity cases to the value of the state of affairs brought about by the existence of a necessary flawed life
-
By focusing on the rights of future people
-
All of the above
-
Both A and B
-
None of the above
Pregunta 67
Pregunta
How does Smolkin attempt to solve the nonidentity problem?
Respuesta
-
By explaining the sense in which nonidentity cases are wronged
-
By denying that nonidentity cases are wronged
-
By arguing that future people have the right not to intentionally be brought into a life that contains a defective life stage
-
Both A and C
-
None of the above
Pregunta 68
Pregunta
What is one thing Smolkin claims that needs to be avoided in providing a rights-based solution to the nonidentity problem?
Pregunta 69
Pregunta
Given two different population rates, suppose population A contains 100 people, each living a life that’s well worth living (e.g. each life contains 10 unit of happiness). Population B contains twice as many people, each also living a life that’s well worth living, although slightly less that the lives in population A (e.g. each life contains 8 units of happiness). According to the Average Principle
Pregunta 70
Pregunta
Given two different population rates, suppose population A contains 100 people, each living a life that’s well worth living (e.g. each life contains 10 unit of happiness). Population B contains the same amount of people, each also living a life that’s well worth living, although slightly less that the lives in population A (e.g. each life contains 8 units of happiness). According to the Total Principle
Pregunta 71
Pregunta
What is the repugnant conclusion?
Respuesta
-
Some lives are objectively better than others
-
Compared with the existence of very many people, all of whom have a very high quality of life, there must be some much larger number of people whose existence, if other things are equal, would be better, even though these people would have lives that are barely worth living
-
Compared with the existence of very many people, all of whom have a very high quality of life, it would be better if those whose quality of life was lowest did not exist
-
Some lives are not worth living at all
Pregunta 72
Pregunta
How does Parfit suggest we avoid the repugnant conclusion?
Respuesta
-
Deny that a world in which there is much more people—each of which has a life worth living, but, on average, has a lesser quality of life than people living in a less populated world—is better than such a less populated world, regardless of the total sum of happiness in each world.
-
Argue that a world in which there is much more people—each of which has a life worth living, but, on average, has a lesser quality of life than people living in a less populated world—would lack some of the things that make life worth living
-
Both A and B
-
Parfit claims we should hesitantly accepts the repugnant conclusion
Pregunta 73
Pregunta
What insight brought forth by Rachels could be used as a way to reject the repugnant conclusion?
Respuesta
-
The idea that the better than relation is transitive
-
The idea that the better than relation is not transitive
-
The idea that it is better to have five minutes of ecstasy than ten minutes of pleasure only slightly less intense than ecstasy
-
The idea that it is better to endure a pounding migraine for five minutes than endure a mild headache for a week
-
None of the above
Pregunta 74
Pregunta
Which is the following relations is most plausibly not transitive?
Respuesta
-
X = Y
-
X is the sibling of Y
-
X is taller than Y
-
X is the coach of Y
-
X is faster than Y
Pregunta 75
Pregunta
What is the prisoner’s dilemma intended to show?
Respuesta
-
You shouldn’t trust anybody
-
It may be rational for two rational agents to choice do something that’s not in each of their best interest
-
You should never cooperate with the police
-
Cooperation requires mutual trust
Pregunta 76
Pregunta
What choice dominates in the prisoner’s dilemma?
Respuesta
-
The choice to confess
-
The choice to remain silent
-
The choice to confess if the accomplice remains silent
-
The choice to remain silent if the accomplice confesses
Pregunta 77
Pregunta
Which two principles of decision theory seem to give conflicting answers to the game described in Newcomb’s problem?
Respuesta
-
The principle of utility and the dominance principle
-
The principle of equality and the dominance principle
-
The principle of utility and the principle of equality
-
The principle of expected utility and the dominance principle
Pregunta 78
Pregunta
If one adopts the dominance principle when reasoning about what to do in the game described in Newcomb’s problem, what will such a person decide to do?
Pregunta 79
Pregunta
Suppose you find yourself on a strange island inhabited by knights, who always tell the truth, and knaves, who always lie. You meet three inhabitants: Smith, Jones and Pita. Smith claims, “I am a knight or Pita is a knave.” Jones says, “Of I and Pita, exactly one is a knight.” Pita tells you that Jones is a knave. Can you determine what are Smith, Jones, and Pita? Briefly explain your reasoning.
Pregunta 80
Pregunta
Suppose you find yourself in a strange island inhabited by knights, who always tell the truth, and knaves, who always lie. You meet three inhabitants: Jones, Smith, and Brown. Jones says “all three of us are knaves”. Smith says “Exactly one of us three is a knight”. Can you determine what Jones, Smith, and Brown are?