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Philosophy
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Doing Philosophy
Quiz 7: The Problem of Skepticism and Knowledge
Path 4
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Question 101
True/False
By means of his method of doubt, Descartes shows that there is one thing we can know with certainty-namely, that we cannot know anything with certainty.
Question 102
True/False
Descartes claims that there is at least one thing that he knows for certain, namely, that he thinks and that he exists.
Question 103
True/False
Descartes method of doubt is intended to determine whether we can have any knowledge of the external world.
Question 104
True/False
According to Descartes, an all-good God would not deceive us about the nature of reality.
Question 105
True/False
According to Descartes, the criteria or principles for determining whether a claim is true are clarity and distinctness.
Question 106
True/False
An a priori statement is one whose truth/falsity can be known without having to appeal to experience.
Question 107
True/False
An a posteriori statement is one whose truth/falsity is known without having to appeal to experience.
Question 108
True/False
According to Locke's theory of perception, our ideas of primary qualities (shape, size, motion, etc.) correspond to the way things are in the world, but our ideas of secondary qualities (color, heat, texture, etc.) do not.
Question 109
True/False
By saying that, at birth, the mind is a tabula rasa, Locke means to highlight the empiricist view that the only source of knowledge is sense experience.
Question 110
True/False
Primary qualities, for Locke, are ideas about things (e.g., being solid, taking up space, being in motion or at rest) which resemble the way those things really are.
Question 111
True/False
Berkeley uses his doctrine that "to be is to be perceived" to show that there are no material objects.
Question 112
True/False
In his critique of Locke, Berkeley argues that primary qualities cannot legitimately be distinguished from secondary qualities because primary qualities depend as much on perception as do secondary qualities.