Deck 7: Philosophy of Art

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Question
Plato often made the characters of his dialogues examples of the theories they were expressing. This was designed to demonstrate his belief that:

A) there is no real difference between appearance and reality.
B) life itself is a form of art.
C) the order of the universe is reflected in the order of the soul.
D) Both A and B
E) All of the above
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Question
According to Plato, the presence of two contradictory impulses in a person such as to grieve and to remain unmoved) indicates that:

A) he or she is internally disordered.
B) two distinct elements of his or her nature are involved.
C) reason no longer rules his soul.
D) he or she is of poor character.
E) None of the above
Question
Which of the following is an example of the distinction between appearance and reality?

A) Arnold looks tall in the movies, but he's really only five feet six inches.
B) My aunt lies about her age.
C) The English horn is neither English nor a horn.
D) All of the above
E) None of the above
Question
How does Plato believe one may know what makes one truly happy?

A) By making sure all of one's opinions are true
B) By carefully observing the actions of those who are truly happy
C) By attaining a systematic understanding of the good for humanity
D) By studying a correct definition of "happiness"
E) None of the above
Question
Gorgias' upright moral character and speeches advocating a false ethical view illustrate the:

A) difference between knowledge and belief.
B) way in which the organization of the individual soul mirrors the organization of the universe.
C) contrast between a persuasive argument and an invalid one.
D) distinction between appearance and reality.
E) All of the above
Question
Plato held that the benefits) of art was/were that it:

A) refines our aesthetic sense.
B) stirs up our emotions.
C) reinforces our psychological harmony.
D) All of the above
E) None of the above
Question
A painting of a chair aims at reproducing:

A) the chair as it really is.
B) the Form of the Chair.
C) a small portion of the real chair.
D) All of the above
E) None of the above
Question
According to Plato, real pizza is:

A) the Form of Pizza, of which all particular pizzas that might be baked are copies.
B) all the particular pizzas that are baked in the world.
C) a photograph of a pizza.
D) All of the above
E) None of the above
Question
A straight stick looks bent when put halfway under water. Plato uses this example to illustrate the:

A) principle of light refraction.
B) distinction between appearance and reality.
C) artistic structure of his dialogues.
D) superiority of reason to observation.
E) None of the above
Question
The faculty Plato thinks gives us the ability to tell appearance from reality is:

A) imagination.
B) intuition.
C) reason.
D) investigation.
E) observation.
Question
According to Plato, a craftsman who builds a chair creates:

A) a real chair which cannot be copied by a painter.
B) a copy of a real chair.
C) a real chair that might be copied by the painter.
D) a chair which is no closer to reality than a painting of a chair.
E) None of the above
Question
Plato says that poets should be excluded from an ideal society because:

A) they undermine the reason.
B) poems appeal to an inferior portion of the soul.
C) the poets creations are only pale reflections of truth.
D) a poem affects the soul as a vicious government affects a state.
E) All of the above
Question
Plato thought that art:

A) leads us away from knowledge.
B) was the path to a deeper understanding of reality.
C) revealed truth in ways that mere reason could not.
D) was more reality than appearance.
E) revealed truth through its beauty.
Question
Plato thinks that Gorgias is dangerous because:

A) his apparently decent speeches conceal the reality of his wicked character.
B) his students follow his false moral principles rather than emulating his morally upright behavior.
C) he is clearly evil, but still attracts students.
D) he speaks the truth, but does not understand what makes his claims true.
E) None of the above
Question
In the Republic, Plato argues that:

A) a society's character is best expressed through its art.
B) art should be banned in an ideal society.
C) artists should be supported by public funding in an ideal society.
D) in a good society, the artists are second in importance only to the rulers.
E) None of the above
Question
In Plato's dialogue entitled Gorgias, the confusion of Callicles' moral relativism is artistically indicated by:

A) his unkempt appearance.
B) Callicles' opposition to Plato's arguments.
C) Callicles' ranting, shouting, abusiveness, and loss of dignity.
D) Plato's refusal to even engage with Callicles.
E) All of the above
Question
According to Plato, a person who has true opinions, but does not know what makes them true:

A) does not appear to be wise.
B) is wise, but cannot lead others to wisdom.
C) appears to be wise, but in fact is not.
D) has achieved true wisdom by avoiding the conceit of knowledge.
E) None of the above
Question
The contributing elements to the artistic brilliance of Plato's dialogues include:

A) the characters are fully-realized human beings.
B) each dialogue is brief enough to be read in its entirety without interruption.
C) the behavior of the characters actually exemplifies the theories Plato is expounding.
D) Both A and C
E) All of the above
Question
According to Plato:

A) a painting of a chair and an actual chair are both copies of the Form of chair.
B) an actual chair resembles the Form of Chair, and the painting of the chair resembles the actual chair.
C) the actual chair resembles the Form of Chair, but the painting of the chair doesn't resemble the actual chair.
D) there is no difference between an actual chair and the Form of Chair.
E) None of the above
Question
Plato and Aristotle agree that:

A) poetry should be banned from an ideal society.
B) art merely provides us with imperfect copies of particular instances of universal forms.
C) we should seek knowledge of the universal forms of justice, beauty, and goodness.
D) All of the above
E) None of the above
Question
Tolstoy believed that the purpose of art was to:

A) unite humanity through shared emotion.
B) move the masses to political action.
C) acquaint us with our true natures.
D) provide pleasure to those who have invested time and effort in the study of art.
E) All of the above
Question
Tolstoy believes that Beethoven's 9th Symphony is bad art because

A) music is incapable of transmitting the highest religious feeling.
B) it mixes poetry and music.
C) in an age before recordings, few people had an opportunity to hear a symphony that required a large orchestra and a chorus.
D) the feelings transmitted by the music did not unite all people, but only a few.
E) Both A and D
Question
Aristotle holds that we can attain true knowledge only by:

A) catharsis.
B) grasping the transcendent Forms through reason.
C) purging ourselves of all harmful passions.
D) coming to know the Forms by studying their particular instances.
E) None of the above
Question
According to Tolstoy:

A) mere speech cannot communicate our thoughts.
B) art is the practice of communicating truth.
C) our feeling may be communicated only through artistic expression.
D) art is our single genuine means of communication.
E) Both A and D
Question
The experience of catharsis is the:

A) arousal of powerful feelings we did not previously possess.
B) purging of powerful emotions that were already present in us.
C) harmful experience of fear and pity.
D) replacement of fear and pity with hope and affection.
E) healthful suppression of fear and pity.
Question
According to Aristotle, the distinction between an historian and a poet is:

A) the former writes in prose, while the latter writes in verse.
B) poetry speaks of universals, while history speaks of particulars.
C) poetry appeals to the emotions, while history appeals to the reason.
D) history describes what might have been, while poetry describes what might be.
E) Both B and D
Question
The pleasure of a tragedy, according to Aristotle, is:

A) the experience of pity and fear.
B) to learn to identify with the protagonist.
C) to return to the lesser troubles of real life.
D) to feel relief that one is not in the same position as the protagonist of the tragedy.
E) Aristotle believes that the benefit of tragedy comes from the fact that they contain no pleasures.
Question
The sort of repression that occurs when you force yourself to endure the unpleasantness of an important vaccination rather than indulging your desire to be elsewhere) is what Marcuse would call:

A) subliminal repression.
B) necessary repression.
C) surplus repression.
D) direct repression.
E) manifest repression.
Question
Tolstoy held that great art must:

A) be imaginative.
B) be sincere.
C) educate the audience.
D) have a subject with wide appeal.
E) Both B and D
Question
A tragedy, according to Aristotle, should involve a:

A) virtuous and just person who is destroyed by an error in judgment.
B) not particularly virtuous person who is destroyed by vice and depravity.
C) virtuous person destroyed by simple bad luck.
D) not particularly virtuous person destroyed by an error in judgment.
E) virtuous person destroyed by vice and depravity.
Question
A repressed desire:

A) is pushed entirely out of the mind.
B) remains in the unconscious, but with its emotional force abated.
C) disappears with the passage of time.
D) remains in the unconscious with all of its emotional force.
E) Both B and C
Question
Who of the following thought one of the primary purposes of art was to instill religious feeling?

A) Aristotle
B) Beethoven
C) Tolstoy
D) Marcuse
E) Marx
Question
Who felt that art was both desirable and a destructive social force?

A) Plato
B) Aristotle
C) Tolstoy
D) Marcuse
E) None of the above
Question
Tolstoy opposed:

A) elitism in art.
B) the expression of religious feeling in art.
C) folk art.
D) the application of objective criteria in judging art.
E) All of the above
Question
According to Aristotle, the universal forms:

A) don't actually exist.
B) are embodied all around us in the things of the world of space and time.
C) exist in an independent transcendent reality.
D) were a fiction created by Plato.
E) None of the above
Question
According to Marcuse, art is:

A) irrational.
B) a destructive social force.
C) a valuable element in human life.
D) Both A and B
E) All of the above
Question
According to whom does knowledge consist of a rational understanding of the realm of universal forms?

A) Kant
B) Aristotle
C) Tolstoy
D) Marcuse
E) Plato
Question
The benefit of a tragedy, according to Aristotle, is to:

A) purge the audience of unrealistic expectations.
B) purge the audience of harmful emotions.
C) put the audience's own troubles in proper perspective.
D) arouse in the audience the emotions of joy and relief.
E) allow members of the audience to understand the suffering of others.
Question
If a boxer is made angry by some event before a bout, and redirects his anger into the fight, that's an example of:

A) repression.
B) sublimation.
C) transfiguration.
D) catharsis.
E) Both A and C
Question
Aristotle tells us that the plot of a good tragedy:

A) should be simple.
B) must imitate actions arousing fear and pity.
C) involves a good man passing from happiness to misery.
D) Both A and C
E) All of the above
Question
In 2006, David Geffen, co-founder with Stephen Spielberg and Jeffrey Katzsenberg of Dream-Works, sold a Jackson Pollock drip painting for:

A) $40 million
B) $100 million
C) $1 million
D) $140 million.
E) $250 million
Question
The purpose of surplus repression is to:

A) preserve the dominance of the ruling sectors of society.
B) provide an outlet for unconscious desires.
C) restrain us from rising up against the ruling class.
D) allow us to "process" certain experiences at some time after they have actually occurred.
E) Both A and C
Question
Plato considers Gorgias morally decent, but still dangerous because of the content of his relativistic views.
Question
Which artist does not count as an example of the new theory of art Danto proffers?

A) Warhol
B) Lichtenstein
C) Oldenburg
D) Rauschenberg
E) None of the above
Question
Plato tells us that reason alone will fail to show us when the easy way is in fact the harmful way.
Question
A persuasive sounding argument which is in fact formally invalid is an example of the distinction between appearance and reality.
Question
According to Marcuse, the social function of art is to:

A) provide a blueprint for a better future.
B) annoy the ruling class.
C) bring the truth to the repressed masses.
D) keep alive the dream of liberation.
E) illustrate the difference between necessary and surplus repression.
Question
George Berkeley and Baruch Spinoza were two other philosophers who wrote extremely artistic dialogues.
Question
Transcendence, in Marcuse's terminology, is:

A) entering a higher, non-material realm.
B) an imaginative leap beyond the repressions of the given social world.
C) an act of artistic revolt, such as calling a blank canvas a painting.
D) the realization that surplus repression is different from necessary repression.
E) the realization that all repression is surplus repression.
Question
Who of the following believes that civilization cannot exist without repression?

A) Plato
B) Aristotle
C) Freud
D) Marcuse
E) Both C and D
Question
Which of the following serve as examples in Danto's essay?

A) Fountain
B) One and Three Chairs
C) 4'33"
D) Both A and C
E) All of the above
Question
Marcuse notes that:

A) the total amount of repression in modern industrial societies is less than the amount of repression in less advanced societies.
B) as our necessary repression has lessened, our surplus repression has increased.
C) we suffer from much less surplus repression today than we did during the time of our grandparents.
D) technology has, it turns out, failed to decrease our burden of necessary repression.
E) it is impossible to decrease the total burden of repression.
Question
Plato demonstrates the difference between appearance and reality by making his characters' behavior the exact opposite of what the theories they are expressing would suggest.
Question
What was wrong with Gauguin's little ceramic sculpture "The Faun"?

A) It was a forgery.
B) Everyone thought it was a forgery, but it was not.
C) It was signed by Gauguin's student.
D) Experts damaged it when trying to determine whether it was a forgery.
E) Gauguin made it in a different style that did not resemble his other work.
Question
What is Connoisseurship?

A) When the work of an artist's pupil is mistaken for the artist's work.
B) When the work of a forger successfully fools the experts.
C) The discovery of a forged work of art.
D) The identification of the artist by his handwriting.
E) Aesthetic appreciation of forgeries.
Question
Marcuse tells us that, in order to encourage people to struggle to free themselves from surplus repression, we must:

A) falsely promise them a release from necessary repression.
B) make them see the difference between the necessary repression they must endure, and the surplus repression from which they can be liberated.
C) first free them from necessary repression.
D) gain the support of the ruling class.
E) None of the above
Question
A philosophical understanding of justice was sufficient to allow Plato to resist the temptation to flee from the punishment to which the Athenians had sentenced him.
Question
Plato held that the metaphysical order of the universe was mirrored in the internal ordering of each person.
Question
One element of the artistic brilliance of Plato's dialogues is the genuine persuasiveness of the arguments presented by his characters.
Question
Marcuse tells us that the amount of necessary repression in modern society should be decreased through:

A) sublimation.
B) transfiguration.
C) technological advances.
D) transforming it into surplus repression.
E) None of the above
Question
According to Plato, a person of high character does not grieve publicly.
Question
According to Plato, art is mere appearance, and hence leads us away from knowledge concerning reality.
Question
Plato tells us that poets ought to be eliminated from a perfect society, even though they appeal to the highest portion of the soul.
Question
A medieval nickname of Plato was "the philosopher."
Question
Anything we call by a common noun will have an associated Form, according to Plato.
Question
According to Plato, a chair has more reality than the ideal Form of a chair.
Question
The tragic poet is more like the craftsman who builds the chair than the painter who represents it, according to Plato.
Question
The impulse to resist grief comes from the spirited portion of the soul, according to Plato.
Question
A representation reproduces only a small part of an object.
Question
The image of an object is a reproduction of a reproduction of the real chair.
Question
Plato objected not just to the truthfulness of artistic representation, but also to its psychological effects.
Question
Plato believed that works of art were the reality underlying the appearances of everyday perceptions.
Question
Plato held that the contemplation of beauty would lead us to a proper inner harmony of the soul.
Question
According to Plato, a person with a well-ordered soul will never experience contradictory impulses.
Question
The work of a carpenter who makes a chair is perfectly real, but the work of a painter who represents it is not.
Question
Mill's claim that some pleasures are higher than others is mirrored by Plato's claim that some pleasures are more real than others.
Question
Just as there can be more than one painting of a single actual chair, a single actual chair can have more than one Form of Chair.
Question
The aim of a painter is not to reproduce an actual object as it is, according to Plato.
Question
Aristotle disagreed with Plato's view that the Forms existed in an independent, transcendent reality, rather than in the world around us.
Question
One proof of the importance of Plato's concerns is that we are swayed by the artistic form of his dialogues, rather than considering their arguments alone.
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Deck 7: Philosophy of Art
1
Plato often made the characters of his dialogues examples of the theories they were expressing. This was designed to demonstrate his belief that:

A) there is no real difference between appearance and reality.
B) life itself is a form of art.
C) the order of the universe is reflected in the order of the soul.
D) Both A and B
E) All of the above
C
2
According to Plato, the presence of two contradictory impulses in a person such as to grieve and to remain unmoved) indicates that:

A) he or she is internally disordered.
B) two distinct elements of his or her nature are involved.
C) reason no longer rules his soul.
D) he or she is of poor character.
E) None of the above
B
3
Which of the following is an example of the distinction between appearance and reality?

A) Arnold looks tall in the movies, but he's really only five feet six inches.
B) My aunt lies about her age.
C) The English horn is neither English nor a horn.
D) All of the above
E) None of the above
A
4
How does Plato believe one may know what makes one truly happy?

A) By making sure all of one's opinions are true
B) By carefully observing the actions of those who are truly happy
C) By attaining a systematic understanding of the good for humanity
D) By studying a correct definition of "happiness"
E) None of the above
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Gorgias' upright moral character and speeches advocating a false ethical view illustrate the:

A) difference between knowledge and belief.
B) way in which the organization of the individual soul mirrors the organization of the universe.
C) contrast between a persuasive argument and an invalid one.
D) distinction between appearance and reality.
E) All of the above
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Unlock for access to all 115 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Plato held that the benefits) of art was/were that it:

A) refines our aesthetic sense.
B) stirs up our emotions.
C) reinforces our psychological harmony.
D) All of the above
E) None of the above
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k this deck
7
A painting of a chair aims at reproducing:

A) the chair as it really is.
B) the Form of the Chair.
C) a small portion of the real chair.
D) All of the above
E) None of the above
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8
According to Plato, real pizza is:

A) the Form of Pizza, of which all particular pizzas that might be baked are copies.
B) all the particular pizzas that are baked in the world.
C) a photograph of a pizza.
D) All of the above
E) None of the above
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k this deck
9
A straight stick looks bent when put halfway under water. Plato uses this example to illustrate the:

A) principle of light refraction.
B) distinction between appearance and reality.
C) artistic structure of his dialogues.
D) superiority of reason to observation.
E) None of the above
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k this deck
10
The faculty Plato thinks gives us the ability to tell appearance from reality is:

A) imagination.
B) intuition.
C) reason.
D) investigation.
E) observation.
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11
According to Plato, a craftsman who builds a chair creates:

A) a real chair which cannot be copied by a painter.
B) a copy of a real chair.
C) a real chair that might be copied by the painter.
D) a chair which is no closer to reality than a painting of a chair.
E) None of the above
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12
Plato says that poets should be excluded from an ideal society because:

A) they undermine the reason.
B) poems appeal to an inferior portion of the soul.
C) the poets creations are only pale reflections of truth.
D) a poem affects the soul as a vicious government affects a state.
E) All of the above
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k this deck
13
Plato thought that art:

A) leads us away from knowledge.
B) was the path to a deeper understanding of reality.
C) revealed truth in ways that mere reason could not.
D) was more reality than appearance.
E) revealed truth through its beauty.
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Unlock for access to all 115 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Plato thinks that Gorgias is dangerous because:

A) his apparently decent speeches conceal the reality of his wicked character.
B) his students follow his false moral principles rather than emulating his morally upright behavior.
C) he is clearly evil, but still attracts students.
D) he speaks the truth, but does not understand what makes his claims true.
E) None of the above
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k this deck
15
In the Republic, Plato argues that:

A) a society's character is best expressed through its art.
B) art should be banned in an ideal society.
C) artists should be supported by public funding in an ideal society.
D) in a good society, the artists are second in importance only to the rulers.
E) None of the above
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k this deck
16
In Plato's dialogue entitled Gorgias, the confusion of Callicles' moral relativism is artistically indicated by:

A) his unkempt appearance.
B) Callicles' opposition to Plato's arguments.
C) Callicles' ranting, shouting, abusiveness, and loss of dignity.
D) Plato's refusal to even engage with Callicles.
E) All of the above
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k this deck
17
According to Plato, a person who has true opinions, but does not know what makes them true:

A) does not appear to be wise.
B) is wise, but cannot lead others to wisdom.
C) appears to be wise, but in fact is not.
D) has achieved true wisdom by avoiding the conceit of knowledge.
E) None of the above
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
18
The contributing elements to the artistic brilliance of Plato's dialogues include:

A) the characters are fully-realized human beings.
B) each dialogue is brief enough to be read in its entirety without interruption.
C) the behavior of the characters actually exemplifies the theories Plato is expounding.
D) Both A and C
E) All of the above
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Unlock for access to all 115 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
19
According to Plato:

A) a painting of a chair and an actual chair are both copies of the Form of chair.
B) an actual chair resembles the Form of Chair, and the painting of the chair resembles the actual chair.
C) the actual chair resembles the Form of Chair, but the painting of the chair doesn't resemble the actual chair.
D) there is no difference between an actual chair and the Form of Chair.
E) None of the above
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k this deck
20
Plato and Aristotle agree that:

A) poetry should be banned from an ideal society.
B) art merely provides us with imperfect copies of particular instances of universal forms.
C) we should seek knowledge of the universal forms of justice, beauty, and goodness.
D) All of the above
E) None of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 115 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Tolstoy believed that the purpose of art was to:

A) unite humanity through shared emotion.
B) move the masses to political action.
C) acquaint us with our true natures.
D) provide pleasure to those who have invested time and effort in the study of art.
E) All of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 115 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Tolstoy believes that Beethoven's 9th Symphony is bad art because

A) music is incapable of transmitting the highest religious feeling.
B) it mixes poetry and music.
C) in an age before recordings, few people had an opportunity to hear a symphony that required a large orchestra and a chorus.
D) the feelings transmitted by the music did not unite all people, but only a few.
E) Both A and D
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 115 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Aristotle holds that we can attain true knowledge only by:

A) catharsis.
B) grasping the transcendent Forms through reason.
C) purging ourselves of all harmful passions.
D) coming to know the Forms by studying their particular instances.
E) None of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 115 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
According to Tolstoy:

A) mere speech cannot communicate our thoughts.
B) art is the practice of communicating truth.
C) our feeling may be communicated only through artistic expression.
D) art is our single genuine means of communication.
E) Both A and D
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 115 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The experience of catharsis is the:

A) arousal of powerful feelings we did not previously possess.
B) purging of powerful emotions that were already present in us.
C) harmful experience of fear and pity.
D) replacement of fear and pity with hope and affection.
E) healthful suppression of fear and pity.
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Unlock for access to all 115 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
According to Aristotle, the distinction between an historian and a poet is:

A) the former writes in prose, while the latter writes in verse.
B) poetry speaks of universals, while history speaks of particulars.
C) poetry appeals to the emotions, while history appeals to the reason.
D) history describes what might have been, while poetry describes what might be.
E) Both B and D
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Unlock for access to all 115 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The pleasure of a tragedy, according to Aristotle, is:

A) the experience of pity and fear.
B) to learn to identify with the protagonist.
C) to return to the lesser troubles of real life.
D) to feel relief that one is not in the same position as the protagonist of the tragedy.
E) Aristotle believes that the benefit of tragedy comes from the fact that they contain no pleasures.
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28
The sort of repression that occurs when you force yourself to endure the unpleasantness of an important vaccination rather than indulging your desire to be elsewhere) is what Marcuse would call:

A) subliminal repression.
B) necessary repression.
C) surplus repression.
D) direct repression.
E) manifest repression.
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Unlock for access to all 115 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Tolstoy held that great art must:

A) be imaginative.
B) be sincere.
C) educate the audience.
D) have a subject with wide appeal.
E) Both B and D
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 115 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
A tragedy, according to Aristotle, should involve a:

A) virtuous and just person who is destroyed by an error in judgment.
B) not particularly virtuous person who is destroyed by vice and depravity.
C) virtuous person destroyed by simple bad luck.
D) not particularly virtuous person destroyed by an error in judgment.
E) virtuous person destroyed by vice and depravity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 115 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
A repressed desire:

A) is pushed entirely out of the mind.
B) remains in the unconscious, but with its emotional force abated.
C) disappears with the passage of time.
D) remains in the unconscious with all of its emotional force.
E) Both B and C
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32
Who of the following thought one of the primary purposes of art was to instill religious feeling?

A) Aristotle
B) Beethoven
C) Tolstoy
D) Marcuse
E) Marx
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33
Who felt that art was both desirable and a destructive social force?

A) Plato
B) Aristotle
C) Tolstoy
D) Marcuse
E) None of the above
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34
Tolstoy opposed:

A) elitism in art.
B) the expression of religious feeling in art.
C) folk art.
D) the application of objective criteria in judging art.
E) All of the above
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35
According to Aristotle, the universal forms:

A) don't actually exist.
B) are embodied all around us in the things of the world of space and time.
C) exist in an independent transcendent reality.
D) were a fiction created by Plato.
E) None of the above
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36
According to Marcuse, art is:

A) irrational.
B) a destructive social force.
C) a valuable element in human life.
D) Both A and B
E) All of the above
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37
According to whom does knowledge consist of a rational understanding of the realm of universal forms?

A) Kant
B) Aristotle
C) Tolstoy
D) Marcuse
E) Plato
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38
The benefit of a tragedy, according to Aristotle, is to:

A) purge the audience of unrealistic expectations.
B) purge the audience of harmful emotions.
C) put the audience's own troubles in proper perspective.
D) arouse in the audience the emotions of joy and relief.
E) allow members of the audience to understand the suffering of others.
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39
If a boxer is made angry by some event before a bout, and redirects his anger into the fight, that's an example of:

A) repression.
B) sublimation.
C) transfiguration.
D) catharsis.
E) Both A and C
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40
Aristotle tells us that the plot of a good tragedy:

A) should be simple.
B) must imitate actions arousing fear and pity.
C) involves a good man passing from happiness to misery.
D) Both A and C
E) All of the above
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41
In 2006, David Geffen, co-founder with Stephen Spielberg and Jeffrey Katzsenberg of Dream-Works, sold a Jackson Pollock drip painting for:

A) $40 million
B) $100 million
C) $1 million
D) $140 million.
E) $250 million
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42
The purpose of surplus repression is to:

A) preserve the dominance of the ruling sectors of society.
B) provide an outlet for unconscious desires.
C) restrain us from rising up against the ruling class.
D) allow us to "process" certain experiences at some time after they have actually occurred.
E) Both A and C
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43
Plato considers Gorgias morally decent, but still dangerous because of the content of his relativistic views.
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44
Which artist does not count as an example of the new theory of art Danto proffers?

A) Warhol
B) Lichtenstein
C) Oldenburg
D) Rauschenberg
E) None of the above
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45
Plato tells us that reason alone will fail to show us when the easy way is in fact the harmful way.
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46
A persuasive sounding argument which is in fact formally invalid is an example of the distinction between appearance and reality.
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47
According to Marcuse, the social function of art is to:

A) provide a blueprint for a better future.
B) annoy the ruling class.
C) bring the truth to the repressed masses.
D) keep alive the dream of liberation.
E) illustrate the difference between necessary and surplus repression.
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48
George Berkeley and Baruch Spinoza were two other philosophers who wrote extremely artistic dialogues.
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49
Transcendence, in Marcuse's terminology, is:

A) entering a higher, non-material realm.
B) an imaginative leap beyond the repressions of the given social world.
C) an act of artistic revolt, such as calling a blank canvas a painting.
D) the realization that surplus repression is different from necessary repression.
E) the realization that all repression is surplus repression.
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50
Who of the following believes that civilization cannot exist without repression?

A) Plato
B) Aristotle
C) Freud
D) Marcuse
E) Both C and D
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51
Which of the following serve as examples in Danto's essay?

A) Fountain
B) One and Three Chairs
C) 4'33"
D) Both A and C
E) All of the above
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52
Marcuse notes that:

A) the total amount of repression in modern industrial societies is less than the amount of repression in less advanced societies.
B) as our necessary repression has lessened, our surplus repression has increased.
C) we suffer from much less surplus repression today than we did during the time of our grandparents.
D) technology has, it turns out, failed to decrease our burden of necessary repression.
E) it is impossible to decrease the total burden of repression.
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53
Plato demonstrates the difference between appearance and reality by making his characters' behavior the exact opposite of what the theories they are expressing would suggest.
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54
What was wrong with Gauguin's little ceramic sculpture "The Faun"?

A) It was a forgery.
B) Everyone thought it was a forgery, but it was not.
C) It was signed by Gauguin's student.
D) Experts damaged it when trying to determine whether it was a forgery.
E) Gauguin made it in a different style that did not resemble his other work.
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55
What is Connoisseurship?

A) When the work of an artist's pupil is mistaken for the artist's work.
B) When the work of a forger successfully fools the experts.
C) The discovery of a forged work of art.
D) The identification of the artist by his handwriting.
E) Aesthetic appreciation of forgeries.
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56
Marcuse tells us that, in order to encourage people to struggle to free themselves from surplus repression, we must:

A) falsely promise them a release from necessary repression.
B) make them see the difference between the necessary repression they must endure, and the surplus repression from which they can be liberated.
C) first free them from necessary repression.
D) gain the support of the ruling class.
E) None of the above
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57
A philosophical understanding of justice was sufficient to allow Plato to resist the temptation to flee from the punishment to which the Athenians had sentenced him.
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58
Plato held that the metaphysical order of the universe was mirrored in the internal ordering of each person.
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59
One element of the artistic brilliance of Plato's dialogues is the genuine persuasiveness of the arguments presented by his characters.
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60
Marcuse tells us that the amount of necessary repression in modern society should be decreased through:

A) sublimation.
B) transfiguration.
C) technological advances.
D) transforming it into surplus repression.
E) None of the above
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61
According to Plato, a person of high character does not grieve publicly.
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62
According to Plato, art is mere appearance, and hence leads us away from knowledge concerning reality.
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63
Plato tells us that poets ought to be eliminated from a perfect society, even though they appeal to the highest portion of the soul.
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64
A medieval nickname of Plato was "the philosopher."
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65
Anything we call by a common noun will have an associated Form, according to Plato.
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66
According to Plato, a chair has more reality than the ideal Form of a chair.
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67
The tragic poet is more like the craftsman who builds the chair than the painter who represents it, according to Plato.
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68
The impulse to resist grief comes from the spirited portion of the soul, according to Plato.
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69
A representation reproduces only a small part of an object.
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70
The image of an object is a reproduction of a reproduction of the real chair.
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71
Plato objected not just to the truthfulness of artistic representation, but also to its psychological effects.
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72
Plato believed that works of art were the reality underlying the appearances of everyday perceptions.
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73
Plato held that the contemplation of beauty would lead us to a proper inner harmony of the soul.
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74
According to Plato, a person with a well-ordered soul will never experience contradictory impulses.
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75
The work of a carpenter who makes a chair is perfectly real, but the work of a painter who represents it is not.
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76
Mill's claim that some pleasures are higher than others is mirrored by Plato's claim that some pleasures are more real than others.
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77
Just as there can be more than one painting of a single actual chair, a single actual chair can have more than one Form of Chair.
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78
The aim of a painter is not to reproduce an actual object as it is, according to Plato.
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79
Aristotle disagreed with Plato's view that the Forms existed in an independent, transcendent reality, rather than in the world around us.
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80
One proof of the importance of Plato's concerns is that we are swayed by the artistic form of his dialogues, rather than considering their arguments alone.
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