Deck 3: Psychology During Mid-Millennium Transitions: the 15th to the End of the 18th Century
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Deck 3: Psychology During Mid-Millennium Transitions: the 15th to the End of the 18th Century
1
Deism is the view suggested that physical and mental processes develop in parallel courses.
False
2
Individualism as a cultural phenomenon, with its emphasis on responsibility, gradual savings, choice, and privacy, has its roots in the Reformation period.
True
3
The scientific belief that experience, especially sensory processes, is the main source of knowledge is called:
A) truth
B) imagination
C) idealism
D) solipsism
E) empiricism
A) truth
B) imagination
C) idealism
D) solipsism
E) empiricism
empiricism
4
The view that observable events should be explained only by natural causes without assuming the existence of divine, paranormal, or supernatural causes such as "magic" or "evil eye" is called:
A) education
B) skepticism
C) deism
D) naturalism
E) solipsism
A) education
B) skepticism
C) deism
D) naturalism
E) solipsism
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5
Humanism is the view emphasizing the uniqueness of the subjective side of the individual: the sense of freedom, beauty, and moral responsibility.
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6
Rationalism is a position in epistemology suggesting that reason is the prime source of knowledge and the thinking mind, not sensations alone, should provide justification of truth.
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7
Solipsism is an approach to explaining the nature of complex processes by reducing them to the interactions of their elements or underlying processes, such as psychological functions are described as simple physiological reactions or reflexes.
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8
What is the name of the theory claiming the self as the only entity that can be known and verified?
A) theology
B) materialism
C) parallelism
D) solipsism
E) philosophy
A) theology
B) materialism
C) parallelism
D) solipsism
E) philosophy
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9
The belief that God has created the universe but abandoned earthly affairs afterward is called:
A) idealism
B) deism
C) dualism
D) theology
E) solipsism
A) idealism
B) deism
C) dualism
D) theology
E) solipsism
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10
Witchcraft in psychology's history stand for experimental studies of practices or arts of witches.
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11
Monads are windowless entities each reflecting the state of every other according to the established principle of harmony.
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12
What is the name of the view that focuses on the mechanical character of the universe and human beings as the consequence?
A) scientific rationalism
B) common sense
C) technological theory
D) deism
E) geometry
A) scientific rationalism
B) common sense
C) technological theory
D) deism
E) geometry
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13
What was the term coined by Rousseau suggesting that people were essentially good when they lived under the rules of nature, before modern civilizations were created?
A) "Generous man"
B) "Noble savage"
C) "Good neighbor"
D) "Natural hero"
E) "Glorious beast"
A) "Generous man"
B) "Noble savage"
C) "Good neighbor"
D) "Natural hero"
E) "Glorious beast"
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14
A belief in the existence of realities beyond perceptual reflection or scientific explanations, but accessible by subjective experience is called:
A) materialism
B) theology
C) mysticism
D) dualism
E) spiritualism
A) materialism
B) theology
C) mysticism
D) dualism
E) spiritualism
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15
"The Noble Savage" was the Latin term used by Locke who believed that the child's mind can record experiences in a fashion similar to the way in which teachers use a piece of chalk to write on the board.
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16
A school of thought suggesting that almost everything about human beings can be effectively explained in mechanical terms is called:
A) mechanism
B) instrumentalism
C) idealism
D) solipsism
E) engineering
A) mechanism
B) instrumentalism
C) idealism
D) solipsism
E) engineering
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17
A philosophical view suggesting that any human action is rational so long as it is justified by the goal an individual pursues is called:
A) rational actor theory
B) arrogance
C) instrumentalism
D) solipsism
E) materialism
A) rational actor theory
B) arrogance
C) instrumentalism
D) solipsism
E) materialism
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18
Historians associate the Renaissance with the reintroduction of major elements of Indian philosophy in arts, sciences, and education.
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19
Metaphysics is the branch of philosophy that examines the nature of reality, including the relationship between mind and matter.
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20
The philosophical tradition that claimed the existence of "parallel" spiritual and material realities is called:
A) dualism
B) spiritualism
C) materialism
D) spiritual materialism
E) theology
A) dualism
B) spiritualism
C) materialism
D) spiritual materialism
E) theology
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21
Five hundred years ago, people who displayed symptoms of sleepwalking disorder were commonly called:
A) witches
B) lunatics
C) criminals
D) feebleminded
E) "foxes"
A) witches
B) lunatics
C) criminals
D) feebleminded
E) "foxes"
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22
David Hume described a personality type called "The Stoic". What are this type's features?
A) sense of humor
B) intelligence
C) action and virtue
D) criminal inclinations
E) inconsistency and weakness
A) sense of humor
B) intelligence
C) action and virtue
D) criminal inclinations
E) inconsistency and weakness
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23
Leibnitz wrote that the soul possesses several areas of knowledge distinguished by the strength of apperception: clear knowledge, fragmented knowledge, and:
A) emotion
B) no knowledge
C) memory
D) unconscious knowledge
E) abstract knowledge
A) emotion
B) no knowledge
C) memory
D) unconscious knowledge
E) abstract knowledge
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24
David Hartley believed that sensation is the consequence of a pulsation of the microscopic elements inside:
A) the heart
B) the liver
C) the skin
D) the nerves
E) the spinal cord
A) the heart
B) the liver
C) the skin
D) the nerves
E) the spinal cord
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25
Thomas Hobbes understood the soul as mechanical movements in the body.
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26
According to Descartes, the animal spirits move along the nerve channels and come into contact with:
A) the liver
B) the skin
C) the brain
D) the air
E) the kidneys
A) the liver
B) the skin
C) the brain
D) the air
E) the kidneys
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27
Immanuel Kant invented the term psychology.
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28
Voltaire believed that human beings have a potential for moral behavior rooted in respect and kindness to other people.
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29
Immanuel Kant believed that human beings don't have a natural predisposition for moral behavior.
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30
Girolamo Cardano, a 16th-century doctor and scientist used this method to convey his psychological observations:
A) a series of public lectures
B) a book
C) a recorded interview
D) a diary
E) an article in a journal
A) a series of public lectures
B) a book
C) a recorded interview
D) a diary
E) an article in a journal
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31
Man a Machine was written by Julien Offray de LaMettrie.
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32
No matter who claims the original authorship, the term psychology remained virtually unknown to the general reading public and was not used frequently until the 18th century.
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33
Robert Burton in England published in 1621 the book called Anatomy of Melancholy devoted to anxiety and mood problems.
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34
Hobbes, Locke, Berkeley, and Hume were all born in England.
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35
David Hartley believed that could explain practically all mental activities of an individual.
A) emotions
B) physical associations
C) chemistry
D) medicine
E) religion
A) emotions
B) physical associations
C) chemistry
D) medicine
E) religion
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36
Historians associate the Renaissance with the reintroduction of major elements of in arts, sciences, and education.
A) Chinese philosophy
B) scientific experimentation
C) logic
D) mathematics
E) Greco-Roman antiquity
A) Chinese philosophy
B) scientific experimentation
C) logic
D) mathematics
E) Greco-Roman antiquity
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37
The famous phrase, "I think, therefore I am" belongs to David Hume
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38
During mid-millennium transitions, there were a few female philosophers, astronomers, and zoologists. Yet women were generally discouraged from studying medicine. The best they could do was to pursue knowledge and develop skills as:
A) pharmacists or midwives
B) university professors
C) physicians
D) scientists
E) lawyers and judges
A) pharmacists or midwives
B) university professors
C) physicians
D) scientists
E) lawyers and judges
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39
Machiavelli wrote that human beings are motivated by kindness or compassion.
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40
This scholar believed that although there is an unknown substance behind the sensations, an individual is still able to learn to coordinate ideas generated by various sensations to judge length, shape, scope, intensity, or magnitude. What was his name?
A) Hobbes
B) Descartes
C) Spinoza
D) Berkeley
E) LaMettrie
A) Hobbes
B) Descartes
C) Spinoza
D) Berkeley
E) LaMettrie
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41
What was David Hume's view of suicide?
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42
Cogito ergo sum is the famous phrase coined by Descartes and reflects one of his most fundamental assumptions about the nature of human existence. What is the English translation of this phrase?
A) "Learn and pray"
B) "Cognition is knowledge"
C) "Know yourself"
D) "I think, therefore I am"
E) "Cognition brings wisdom"
A) "Learn and pray"
B) "Cognition is knowledge"
C) "Know yourself"
D) "I think, therefore I am"
E) "Cognition brings wisdom"
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43
Earlier in the 15th century, the pope had sent Jacob Sprenger and Heinrich Krämer, two Dominican monks, to investigate witchcraft. As the result of their work with written sources and personal accounts of other people, they published a book entitled The Malleus Maleficarum, commonly known as:
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44
Spinoza believed that people lose freedom for one particular reason related to their wishes. What was this reason?
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45
While there is no universally accepted theory to explain the global complexity of mid-millennium transitions, historians generally agree about Western civilization. They describe this period in terms of three fundamental developments:
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46
It was commonly accepted around the 16th century that the brain's functions were localized in the:
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47
In Descartes' theory, the animal spirits move along the nerve channels and come into contact with the brain. What happens because of this contact?
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48
What was the central idea of his Treatise on the Sensations, published by Condillac in 1754?
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49
Rousseau coined the term suggesting that people were essentially good when they lived under the rules of nature, before modern civilizations were created.
A) "power hero"
B) "righteous woman"
C) "noble savage"
D) "fair gentleman"
E) "natural beauty"
A) "power hero"
B) "righteous woman"
C) "noble savage"
D) "fair gentleman"
E) "natural beauty"
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50
Critics wrote that La Mettrie's theory was explaining phenomena on one level in terms of phenomena on a lower, seemingly less complex level. What is the name of this approach?
A) leveling
B) lowering
C) reductionism
D) downward materialism
E) complex materialism
A) leveling
B) lowering
C) reductionism
D) downward materialism
E) complex materialism
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51
Why did religious authorities attack La Mettrie's book, Man a Machine?
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52
In addition to his publications, Holbach was best known for hosting his famous periodic "get-togethers" of people of social status and intellectual merit. These gatherings were know as:
A) salon
B) discussion club
C) debate club
D) rhetoric party
E) oratory evenings
A) salon
B) discussion club
C) debate club
D) rhetoric party
E) oratory evenings
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53
What is the Condillac statue?
A) a statue located in the Borghese museum in Rome
B) a model or allegory to explain Condillac's views
C) a special law to protect freedom of speech
D) a statue in the Museum of Science in Stockholm
E) an effigy in Tokyo to symbolize 200 years of experimental psychology
A) a statue located in the Borghese museum in Rome
B) a model or allegory to explain Condillac's views
C) a special law to protect freedom of speech
D) a statue in the Museum of Science in Stockholm
E) an effigy in Tokyo to symbolize 200 years of experimental psychology
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54
What was theopathy according to David Hartley?
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55
Why was David Hume against divorce?
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56
Records show that these two categories of women were significantly more likely than other people to be prosecuted for witchcraft:
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57
In The Passions of the Soul, Descartes hypothesized that some part of the brain should serve as a connector or doorway between the soul and the body. What was this part?
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58
Harvey made comments about psychology. He believed in the existence of a general processing mechanism, called:
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59
For Benedict de Spinoza, God was nature and nature was God. This position is often referred to as:
A) atheism
B) materialism
C) idealism
D) solipsism
E) pantheism
A) atheism
B) materialism
C) idealism
D) solipsism
E) pantheism
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60
John Locke distinguished two processes in human experience:
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61
What did the term "noble savage" stand for?
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62
In the biographical sketch about Girolamo Cardano there is a brief description of the consensus effect and the above average effect. Apply them to your behavior and experiences. Provide examples.
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63
What was Kant's "Golden Rule"?
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64
"National character" is likely to be a stereotype and a poor guide to understanding the people of other countries or regions. What specific stereotypes referring to your own (or your friend's) "national character" have you encountered?
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65
Discuss the noble savage assumption that people were essentially good when they lived under the rules of nature, before modern civilizations advanced. What arguments for and against this assumption could you offer?
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66
In you view, will people living 100 years from now, be able to judge about the state of psychological knowledge of the early 21st century by studying, for example, Facebook postings? Explain your view.
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67
La Mettrie's views are frequently called reductionist. Why?
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68
Compare humanism and scientific rationality.
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69
What were David Hume's views of national character?
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