Deck 6: Truth

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Question
If you endorse rationalist epistemology you are committed to the pragmatist view of truth.
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Question
Bertrand Russell developed a

A) Foundational theory
B) Pragmatic theory
C) Correspondence theory
D) Skeptical theory
Question
Martin Luther believed that there was only one true meaning of scripture.
Question
In real life we seem to believe that "truth" means different things.
Question
A priori propositions are propositions that we can know to be true without having to observe the world.
Question
The Logic school of Indian philosophy endorsed the correspondence theory of truth.
Question
Which of the following philosophers proposed a version of the correspondence theory of truth?

A) Rudolf Carnap
B) Clarence I. Lewis
C) Bertrand Russell
D) George Bishop Berkeley
Question
Who argued that the truth of an idea depends on the practical difference it makes?

A) Hume
B) Locke
C) James
D) Russell
Question
Which of the following logician and philosopher argues that truth is a property of sentences?

A) Alvin Goldman
B) C. I. Lewis
C) Alfred Tarski
D) John Searle
Question
We might have difficulty expressing the difference between truth and falsity.
Question
Vatsyayana accepted which view of truth?

A) Rationalism
B) Foundationalism
C) Correspondence
D) Pragmatism
Question
C. G. Hempel rejected the coherentist view of truth.
Question
Rorty is a pragmatist about truth.
Question
Dharmakirti accepted a foundationalist view of truth.
Question
No Eastern philosophers accept the pragmatic view of truth.
Question
There are different versions of the correspondence theory of truth.
Question
A key problem with the correspondence theory of truth is that it assumes that we can determine if our beliefs correspond to any external reality.
Question
There are only two major theories of truth.
Question
Gettier examples assume

A) That people are justified in believing things when they rely on their past experiences
B) That justified true belief constitutes knowledge
C) That people are justified in believing things when they rely on others' testimony
D) That people can only rely on their senses for knowledge
Question
One objection to the coherence view of truth is that testing the truth of a belief by reference to other beliefs might be
to test it against false beliefs.
Question
What contemporary philosopher argues that truth is whatever has passed society's "procedures of justification"?

A) Richard Rorty
B) Bertrand Russell
C) John Locke
D) Alfred Tarski
Question
Which of the following philosophers accepted the coherence theory of truth?

A) Dharmakirti
B) Vatsyayana
C) John Dewey
D) Charles S. Peirce
Question
According to the theory of truth a statement is true if it is useful to believe.

A) pragmatic
B) coherence
C) foundationalist
D) correspondence
Question
What philosopher argued that we should strive to develop a perfect language in which we could express our ideas with complete clarity?

A) Thomas Aquinas
B) Gottfried Leibniz
C) Wilhelm Dilthey
D) Friedrich Schleiermacher
Question
What do facts need to have meaning, according to Carl L. Becker?

A) They need to be situated in a web of circumstances that produced them.
B) They need to be endorsed by expert authorities.
C) They need to be verified.
D) They need to be verifiable.
Question
According to the view of scientific truth, scientific theories are literally true or false.

A) pragamatist
B) relativist
C) realist
D) instrumentalist
Question
The traditional view of knowledge holds that it is

A) Justified experiential belief.
B) Justified innate belief.
C) Justified true proposition.
D) Justified true belief.
Question
Once a contradiction is allowed it is possible to prove that

A) any statement is false.
B) any statement is true.
C) no statements are true.
D) no tautologies are possible.
Question
According to the theory of truth a belief is true if it coheres with other beliefs that we regard as true.
Question
The view that truth is an agreement between a proposition and some facts in the world is the
____________________ theory of truth.
Question
Searle argues that the word was developed so that we could talk about what it is about the real world that makes a proposition true.
Question
If I believe that what "truth" is is context­dependent I will likely endorse a

A) pluralist theory of truth.
B) coherence theory of truth.
C) Wittgensteinian theory of truth.
D) correspondence theory of truth.
Question
According to the theory of truth, a belief is true if it is, or can be, integrated within the framework of all the other beliefs that we already accept as true.

A) pragmatic
B) foundationalist
C) coherence
D) correspondence
Question
If I say that "snow is white is true" only if snow is white, what theory of truth am I likely endorsing?

A) The pragmatist theory.
B) The coherence theory.
C) The corespondance theory.
D) The antirealist theory.
Question
The theories of truth discussed in this chapter assume that truth is a(n) concept.
Question
Who claimed that we have a desire to know everything that there is to know about the world?

A) Hume
B) Hegel
C) Buddha
D) Blanshard
Question
What philosopher wrote: "The world is the totallity of facts, not of things."?

A) Thomas Aquinas
B) Hans-Georg Gadamer
C) Ludwig Wittgenstein
D) Wilhelm Dilthey
Question
Propositions that we cannot know unless we observe the world are called empirical, or propositions.
Question
Statements or sentences express the contents of our .
Question
Bertrand Russell endorsed the theory of truth.
Question
Do you think that the pragmatic theory of truth is a theory of truth in the same way as the correspondence and coherence theories are theories of truth? Argue for your view.
Question
The realist view of scientific truth is a version of the theory of truth.
Question
William James claimed that a true belief was one that we could validate or .
Question
Do you believe that knowledge is justified true belief? Why, or why not? In answering this question you should draw on the work of both Gettier and Plato.
Question
The conceptual relativist claims that we cannot know the world independently of our .
Question
Assume that Berkeley's idealism is correct. Which theory of truth would best fit with such a universe (a) if God did not exist, (b) if God did exist, and had the properties that Berkeley ascribed to Him? Explain your answer fully.
Question
Is it possible to give a literal reading of a text, untouched by interpretation? Justify your answer, and apply it to at least one practical issues, such as (a) whether judges "make law" in applying it, or (b) whether religious fundamentalism is internally coherent.
Question
What does the claim that all observations are "theory laden" mean? Do you believe that this claim is true? Why, or
why not?
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Deck 6: Truth
1
If you endorse rationalist epistemology you are committed to the pragmatist view of truth.
False
2
Bertrand Russell developed a

A) Foundational theory
B) Pragmatic theory
C) Correspondence theory
D) Skeptical theory
B
3
Martin Luther believed that there was only one true meaning of scripture.
True
4
In real life we seem to believe that "truth" means different things.
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5
A priori propositions are propositions that we can know to be true without having to observe the world.
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6
The Logic school of Indian philosophy endorsed the correspondence theory of truth.
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7
Which of the following philosophers proposed a version of the correspondence theory of truth?

A) Rudolf Carnap
B) Clarence I. Lewis
C) Bertrand Russell
D) George Bishop Berkeley
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8
Who argued that the truth of an idea depends on the practical difference it makes?

A) Hume
B) Locke
C) James
D) Russell
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9
Which of the following logician and philosopher argues that truth is a property of sentences?

A) Alvin Goldman
B) C. I. Lewis
C) Alfred Tarski
D) John Searle
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10
We might have difficulty expressing the difference between truth and falsity.
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11
Vatsyayana accepted which view of truth?

A) Rationalism
B) Foundationalism
C) Correspondence
D) Pragmatism
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12
C. G. Hempel rejected the coherentist view of truth.
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13
Rorty is a pragmatist about truth.
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14
Dharmakirti accepted a foundationalist view of truth.
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15
No Eastern philosophers accept the pragmatic view of truth.
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16
There are different versions of the correspondence theory of truth.
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17
A key problem with the correspondence theory of truth is that it assumes that we can determine if our beliefs correspond to any external reality.
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18
There are only two major theories of truth.
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19
Gettier examples assume

A) That people are justified in believing things when they rely on their past experiences
B) That justified true belief constitutes knowledge
C) That people are justified in believing things when they rely on others' testimony
D) That people can only rely on their senses for knowledge
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20
One objection to the coherence view of truth is that testing the truth of a belief by reference to other beliefs might be
to test it against false beliefs.
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k this deck
21
What contemporary philosopher argues that truth is whatever has passed society's "procedures of justification"?

A) Richard Rorty
B) Bertrand Russell
C) John Locke
D) Alfred Tarski
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k this deck
22
Which of the following philosophers accepted the coherence theory of truth?

A) Dharmakirti
B) Vatsyayana
C) John Dewey
D) Charles S. Peirce
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23
According to the theory of truth a statement is true if it is useful to believe.

A) pragmatic
B) coherence
C) foundationalist
D) correspondence
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k this deck
24
What philosopher argued that we should strive to develop a perfect language in which we could express our ideas with complete clarity?

A) Thomas Aquinas
B) Gottfried Leibniz
C) Wilhelm Dilthey
D) Friedrich Schleiermacher
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Unlock for access to all 48 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
What do facts need to have meaning, according to Carl L. Becker?

A) They need to be situated in a web of circumstances that produced them.
B) They need to be endorsed by expert authorities.
C) They need to be verified.
D) They need to be verifiable.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 48 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
According to the view of scientific truth, scientific theories are literally true or false.

A) pragamatist
B) relativist
C) realist
D) instrumentalist
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The traditional view of knowledge holds that it is

A) Justified experiential belief.
B) Justified innate belief.
C) Justified true proposition.
D) Justified true belief.
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Unlock for access to all 48 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Once a contradiction is allowed it is possible to prove that

A) any statement is false.
B) any statement is true.
C) no statements are true.
D) no tautologies are possible.
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29
According to the theory of truth a belief is true if it coheres with other beliefs that we regard as true.
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k this deck
30
The view that truth is an agreement between a proposition and some facts in the world is the
____________________ theory of truth.
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31
Searle argues that the word was developed so that we could talk about what it is about the real world that makes a proposition true.
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k this deck
32
If I believe that what "truth" is is context­dependent I will likely endorse a

A) pluralist theory of truth.
B) coherence theory of truth.
C) Wittgensteinian theory of truth.
D) correspondence theory of truth.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 48 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
According to the theory of truth, a belief is true if it is, or can be, integrated within the framework of all the other beliefs that we already accept as true.

A) pragmatic
B) foundationalist
C) coherence
D) correspondence
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Unlock for access to all 48 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
If I say that "snow is white is true" only if snow is white, what theory of truth am I likely endorsing?

A) The pragmatist theory.
B) The coherence theory.
C) The corespondance theory.
D) The antirealist theory.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
The theories of truth discussed in this chapter assume that truth is a(n) concept.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Who claimed that we have a desire to know everything that there is to know about the world?

A) Hume
B) Hegel
C) Buddha
D) Blanshard
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 48 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
What philosopher wrote: "The world is the totallity of facts, not of things."?

A) Thomas Aquinas
B) Hans-Georg Gadamer
C) Ludwig Wittgenstein
D) Wilhelm Dilthey
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Unlock for access to all 48 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Propositions that we cannot know unless we observe the world are called empirical, or propositions.
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k this deck
39
Statements or sentences express the contents of our .
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40
Bertrand Russell endorsed the theory of truth.
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41
Do you think that the pragmatic theory of truth is a theory of truth in the same way as the correspondence and coherence theories are theories of truth? Argue for your view.
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42
The realist view of scientific truth is a version of the theory of truth.
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43
William James claimed that a true belief was one that we could validate or .
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44
Do you believe that knowledge is justified true belief? Why, or why not? In answering this question you should draw on the work of both Gettier and Plato.
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k this deck
45
The conceptual relativist claims that we cannot know the world independently of our .
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k this deck
46
Assume that Berkeley's idealism is correct. Which theory of truth would best fit with such a universe (a) if God did not exist, (b) if God did exist, and had the properties that Berkeley ascribed to Him? Explain your answer fully.
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Unlock for access to all 48 flashcards in this deck.
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47
Is it possible to give a literal reading of a text, untouched by interpretation? Justify your answer, and apply it to at least one practical issues, such as (a) whether judges "make law" in applying it, or (b) whether religious fundamentalism is internally coherent.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 48 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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48
What does the claim that all observations are "theory laden" mean? Do you believe that this claim is true? Why, or
why not?
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locked card icon
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