Deck 3: Metaphysics and Philosophy of Mind

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Question
According to Descartes, the properties of physical objects include:

A) intention.
B) extension.
C) rational order.
D) purpose.
E) None of the above
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Question
Hobbes and Hume agree that:

A) freedom of the will is impossible.
B) we are always morally responsible for our actions.
C) human actions are determined.
D) causal judgments are invalid.
E) None of the above
Question
If the consciousness objection is sound:

A) Hobbes was correct.
B) idealism is false.
C) dualism is false.
D) materialism is false.
E) all of our actions are causally determined.
Question
Which of the following is not a form of the mind-body problem?

A) How do minds and bodies causally interact?
B) What is the special relationship between my mind and my body?
C) How can minds know anything about bodies?
D) Do I exist as a thinking thing?
E) All of the above are forms of the mind-body problem.
Question
Who argued that our everyday human activity presupposed that our actions were causally determined?

A) Kant
B) Hume
C) Hobbes
D) Leibniz
E) The Greek atomists
Question
A philosopher who believes in the existence of physical matter:

A) might be an idealist.
B) must be a materialist.
C) might be either a dualist or a materialist.
D) must be a dualist.
E) can't be a dualist.
Question
According to the consciousness objection:

A) a sufficiently complex machine might be conscious.
B) consciousness is incompatible with voluntary action.
C) none of us are truly conscious.
D) people are conscious if and only if machines are.
E) no mere machine can be self-aware.
Question
The view the author calls the "everything-is-a-body" theory is:

A) determinism.
B) universalism.
C) psycho-physical dualism.
D) materialism.
E) skepticism.
Question
Which of the following were materialists?

A) Descartes
B) Hobbes
C) The Greek atomists
D) Kant
E) Both B and C
Question
It's central to Kant's resolution of the determinism/free will debate that:

A) physics is an incomplete science.
B) causation is a scientific concept, not an ethical one.
D) physics tells us only about the world as it appears to us, not about how it is in independent reality.
D) we are causally determined in the realm of independent reality.
E) we are free from the standpoint of the realm of
Appearance.
Question
According to Hobbes, if I'm robbed at gunpoint:

A) I act freely when I give up my wallet.
B) my fear of death prevents my acting freely.
C) my duty to preserve my life makes my actions necessary, not free.
D) my actions are physically determined, and thus not free.
E) the robber's actions are physically determined, and thus he is not morally responsible for them.
Question
The point of the example with the very large and very small dominoes is to:

A) prove that invisible things exist.
B) challenge the consciousness objection.
C) show that our perception that we act freely doesn't prove that we in fact do so.
D) prove that we act freely.
E) None of the above
Question
According to Hobbes, when I say someone has acted freely I'm:

A) necessarily mistaken.
B) saying that his action wasn't physically caused.
C) saying that no outside force prevented him from doing what he decided to do.
D) Both B and C
E) None of the above
Question
In Thomas Hobbes terminology, an "endeavor" is:

A) conscious attempt to do or make something.
B) tiny, invisible bodily motion toward or away from something.
C) long term project to accomplish something.
D) deliberate attempt to oppose one's own will.
E) None of the above
Question
The mind-body problem poses a difficulty chiefly for

A) materialists.
B) idealists.
C) dualists.
D) Both A and C
E) Both B and C
Question
Hobbes denies that:

A) we are free to choose our actions.
B) our actions are causally determined.
C) humans are just complicated machines.
D) sense organs can affect brain activity.
E) None of the above
Question
According to Hobbes, when I'm deliberating about whether to reach out and grasp an object:

A) I physically move back and forth, toward and away from the object.
B) I consider the matter in my mind, and move only after I've made a decision.
C) I'm considering performing a "vital" action.
D) the evidence of my senses cannot influence the process.
E) None of the above
Question
Kant says those who believe there is a real conflict between free will and determination:

A) are contradicting themselves.
B) mistakenly believe in the absolute reality of appearances.
C) mistakenly believe in a cause-effect relation.
D) mistakenly believe in laws of nature.
E) All of the above
Question
Metaphysics, in modern philosophy, refers to:

A) things that are beyond physics.
B) the study of the principles of physical motion.
C) the study of the most fundamental principles of the nature of things.
D) the study of phenomena which are beyond nature.
E) the study of the unknowable.
Question
In Leviathan, Hobbes claimed:

A) none of our motions are voluntary.
B) all of our motions are voluntary.
C) our "vital" motions are involuntary, but our "animal" motions are voluntary.
D) our "animal" motions are involuntary, but our "vital" motions are voluntary.
E) voluntary motions can be performed without an act of will.
Question
Why doesn't the Order of Cosmic Engineers allow Digital People to be voting members of its ruling body?

A) Because the anonymity of the Digital People makes them hard to trust
B) Because one real person could vote twice by creating two avatars
C) Because Digital People are run by computers not human beings
D) Because Digital People have united to promote a dangerous political agenda
E) Because the Order of Cosmic Engineers is biased in favor of real people.
Question
"Does the soul exist?" is a theological, not a metaphysical, question.
Question
To say that the experience of seeing a green apple should itself be green is what Smart calls:

A) an irreducible law.
B) the phenomenological fallacy.
C) billiard-ball physics.
D) the mind-body problem.
E) the cosmological fallacy.
Question
Which of the following is not a question of metaphysics?

A) Does the past exist?
B) Does God exist?
C) Must knowledge be certain?
D) Could there exist a universe without time?
E) What is the relationship between the mind and the body?
Question
Descartes' motivations in developing the official dualist viewpoint did not include a desire to:

A) found a new theory of the universe.
B) extend mathematics to the realm of the physical.
C) find a place in the material world for immaterial mind.
D) confirm Scholastic doctrine.
E) demonstrate the possibility of immortality.
Question
Hobbes argues that human beings must be something more than just complicated machines.
Question
One of Norman Malcolm's objections to Smart's materialism is that:

A) there's no such thing as a "brain state."
B) materialism seems to deny the existence of God.
C) there are no psycho-physical laws.
D) Smart's definition of matter is too inclusive.
E) brain phenomena have spatial locations, but emotions don't.
Question
Which of the following are not substances, according to traditional metaphysical usage?

A) A horse
B) A man
C) A smile
D) A soul
E) An essence
Question
The key problem for a materialist is how to explain the human mind and will in terms of physics.
Question
Someone who believes that "bodies" are actually collections of ideas is a:

A) materialist.
B) psycho-physical dualist.
C) Cartesian dualist.
D) idealist.
E) nihilist.
Question
Philosophers don't argue so much about whether particular things exist, but about what sorts of things exist.
Question
Hobbes, as a materialist, disagreed with the theories of the Greek atomists.
Question
According to Descartes, bodies are:

A) complex.
B) extended.
C) composite.
D) unconscious.
E) All of the above
Question
What is a Digital Person?

A) A computer technician who specializes in virtual world graphics
B) Anyone who has an avatar in Second Life
C) Someone who conducts business anonymously through an avatar
D) A computer program that simulates human behavior
E) A member of a political organization seeking to ban the Internet
Question
How many registered "residents" are there in Second Life?

A) Several hundred
B) Approximately seven-hundred thousand
C) Nearly one million
D) More than eight million
E) More than fifty million
Question
What philosophers call "metaphysics" is the same area of study that Aristotle called "first philosophy."
Question
Which of the following is a materialist?

A) Kant
B) Leibniz
C) Berkeley
D) Descartes
E) None of the above
Question
Our word "metaphysics" is derived from a Greek term meaning "the books which come after the physics."
Question
Which of the following would J. J.

A) Lightning
B) Gravitational fields
C) Neutrons
D) Light
E) Smart considers all of the above to be matter.
Question
Which philosophical theory explicitly rejects Cartesian interactionism?

A) Materialism
B) Idealism
C) Epiphenomenalism
D) Occasionalism
E) Neutral Monism
Question
Kant tries to resolve the conflict between free will and determinism by appealing to the difference between appearance and reality.
Question
According to Descartes, every object in the physical universe has an immaterial spirit.
Question
Kant says physical causation does not take place within the realm of appearance.
Question
Modern neurophysiological explanations of voluntary actions are not materialistic.
Question
If our actions are causally determined, we're never morally responsible for our actions.
Question
"Autonomous" comes from a Greek expression meaning "beyond the law."
Question
Both appetites and aversions are kinds of endeavors, according to Hobbes.
Question
According to Kant, if the things we perceive are things-in-themselves, freedom is impossible.
Question
Science, according to Kant, gives us knowledge of independent reality.
Question
Hobbes divided all human motions into two sorts--vital motions and animal motions.
Question
Hume believes that human actions have the same causal regularity that the movement of the planets does.
Question
According to Smart, all psychological laws and properties are reducible to physical laws and properties.
Question
Materialism is the only one-substance theory considered in this chapter.
Question
Hobbes has no reply to the consciousness objection.
Question
According to Hobbes, I can act "freely" even if my actions are causally determined.
Question
Smart's central claim is that states of consciousness are identical with states of the brain.
Question
The problem of other minds is an epistemological problem.
Question
According to the traditional theory of substance, minds can only interact with other minds.
Question
Hobbes believed there was no contradiction between saying i) that I did something freely, and ii) that I couldn't have chosen to do anything else.
Question
According to the consciousness objection, we are not merely material beings.
Question
All claims of identity reduce to claims of identity of meaning or sense.
Question
According to Descartes, the fundamental property of mental substance is immortality.
Question
According to our author, the mental is inextricably tied to the physical.
Question
Avatars can contract virtually fatal diseases and virtually die. .
Question
Materialism and idealism are both kinds of monism.
Question
The university is an example of what Ryle calls a "category mistake."
Question
Sue Hoogestraat does not mind that her real life husband has a virtual wife in Second Life. .
Question
According to our author, Descartes' dream of a unified theory has not been achieved.
Question
Descartes attempted to articulate the teleological purposiveness of material nature.
Question
Descartes believed that mind and body were separate substances, and not just conceptual distinct.
Question
The identity of the evening and the morning star is only contingent identity.
Question
Ric Hoogestraat justifies his time spent in Second Life by comparing it to his wife's time spent watching television. .
Question
Contemporary philosophers rarely refer to the mind as a substance.
Question
Gilbert Ryle derived his dualistic view from Descartes.
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Deck 3: Metaphysics and Philosophy of Mind
1
According to Descartes, the properties of physical objects include:

A) intention.
B) extension.
C) rational order.
D) purpose.
E) None of the above
B
2
Hobbes and Hume agree that:

A) freedom of the will is impossible.
B) we are always morally responsible for our actions.
C) human actions are determined.
D) causal judgments are invalid.
E) None of the above
C
3
If the consciousness objection is sound:

A) Hobbes was correct.
B) idealism is false.
C) dualism is false.
D) materialism is false.
E) all of our actions are causally determined.
D
4
Which of the following is not a form of the mind-body problem?

A) How do minds and bodies causally interact?
B) What is the special relationship between my mind and my body?
C) How can minds know anything about bodies?
D) Do I exist as a thinking thing?
E) All of the above are forms of the mind-body problem.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Who argued that our everyday human activity presupposed that our actions were causally determined?

A) Kant
B) Hume
C) Hobbes
D) Leibniz
E) The Greek atomists
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
A philosopher who believes in the existence of physical matter:

A) might be an idealist.
B) must be a materialist.
C) might be either a dualist or a materialist.
D) must be a dualist.
E) can't be a dualist.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
According to the consciousness objection:

A) a sufficiently complex machine might be conscious.
B) consciousness is incompatible with voluntary action.
C) none of us are truly conscious.
D) people are conscious if and only if machines are.
E) no mere machine can be self-aware.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The view the author calls the "everything-is-a-body" theory is:

A) determinism.
B) universalism.
C) psycho-physical dualism.
D) materialism.
E) skepticism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Which of the following were materialists?

A) Descartes
B) Hobbes
C) The Greek atomists
D) Kant
E) Both B and C
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
It's central to Kant's resolution of the determinism/free will debate that:

A) physics is an incomplete science.
B) causation is a scientific concept, not an ethical one.
D) physics tells us only about the world as it appears to us, not about how it is in independent reality.
D) we are causally determined in the realm of independent reality.
E) we are free from the standpoint of the realm of
Appearance.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
According to Hobbes, if I'm robbed at gunpoint:

A) I act freely when I give up my wallet.
B) my fear of death prevents my acting freely.
C) my duty to preserve my life makes my actions necessary, not free.
D) my actions are physically determined, and thus not free.
E) the robber's actions are physically determined, and thus he is not morally responsible for them.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The point of the example with the very large and very small dominoes is to:

A) prove that invisible things exist.
B) challenge the consciousness objection.
C) show that our perception that we act freely doesn't prove that we in fact do so.
D) prove that we act freely.
E) None of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
According to Hobbes, when I say someone has acted freely I'm:

A) necessarily mistaken.
B) saying that his action wasn't physically caused.
C) saying that no outside force prevented him from doing what he decided to do.
D) Both B and C
E) None of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
In Thomas Hobbes terminology, an "endeavor" is:

A) conscious attempt to do or make something.
B) tiny, invisible bodily motion toward or away from something.
C) long term project to accomplish something.
D) deliberate attempt to oppose one's own will.
E) None of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The mind-body problem poses a difficulty chiefly for

A) materialists.
B) idealists.
C) dualists.
D) Both A and C
E) Both B and C
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Hobbes denies that:

A) we are free to choose our actions.
B) our actions are causally determined.
C) humans are just complicated machines.
D) sense organs can affect brain activity.
E) None of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
According to Hobbes, when I'm deliberating about whether to reach out and grasp an object:

A) I physically move back and forth, toward and away from the object.
B) I consider the matter in my mind, and move only after I've made a decision.
C) I'm considering performing a "vital" action.
D) the evidence of my senses cannot influence the process.
E) None of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Kant says those who believe there is a real conflict between free will and determination:

A) are contradicting themselves.
B) mistakenly believe in the absolute reality of appearances.
C) mistakenly believe in a cause-effect relation.
D) mistakenly believe in laws of nature.
E) All of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Metaphysics, in modern philosophy, refers to:

A) things that are beyond physics.
B) the study of the principles of physical motion.
C) the study of the most fundamental principles of the nature of things.
D) the study of phenomena which are beyond nature.
E) the study of the unknowable.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
In Leviathan, Hobbes claimed:

A) none of our motions are voluntary.
B) all of our motions are voluntary.
C) our "vital" motions are involuntary, but our "animal" motions are voluntary.
D) our "animal" motions are involuntary, but our "vital" motions are voluntary.
E) voluntary motions can be performed without an act of will.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Why doesn't the Order of Cosmic Engineers allow Digital People to be voting members of its ruling body?

A) Because the anonymity of the Digital People makes them hard to trust
B) Because one real person could vote twice by creating two avatars
C) Because Digital People are run by computers not human beings
D) Because Digital People have united to promote a dangerous political agenda
E) Because the Order of Cosmic Engineers is biased in favor of real people.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
"Does the soul exist?" is a theological, not a metaphysical, question.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
To say that the experience of seeing a green apple should itself be green is what Smart calls:

A) an irreducible law.
B) the phenomenological fallacy.
C) billiard-ball physics.
D) the mind-body problem.
E) the cosmological fallacy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Which of the following is not a question of metaphysics?

A) Does the past exist?
B) Does God exist?
C) Must knowledge be certain?
D) Could there exist a universe without time?
E) What is the relationship between the mind and the body?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Descartes' motivations in developing the official dualist viewpoint did not include a desire to:

A) found a new theory of the universe.
B) extend mathematics to the realm of the physical.
C) find a place in the material world for immaterial mind.
D) confirm Scholastic doctrine.
E) demonstrate the possibility of immortality.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Hobbes argues that human beings must be something more than just complicated machines.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
One of Norman Malcolm's objections to Smart's materialism is that:

A) there's no such thing as a "brain state."
B) materialism seems to deny the existence of God.
C) there are no psycho-physical laws.
D) Smart's definition of matter is too inclusive.
E) brain phenomena have spatial locations, but emotions don't.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Which of the following are not substances, according to traditional metaphysical usage?

A) A horse
B) A man
C) A smile
D) A soul
E) An essence
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The key problem for a materialist is how to explain the human mind and will in terms of physics.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Someone who believes that "bodies" are actually collections of ideas is a:

A) materialist.
B) psycho-physical dualist.
C) Cartesian dualist.
D) idealist.
E) nihilist.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Philosophers don't argue so much about whether particular things exist, but about what sorts of things exist.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Hobbes, as a materialist, disagreed with the theories of the Greek atomists.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
According to Descartes, bodies are:

A) complex.
B) extended.
C) composite.
D) unconscious.
E) All of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
What is a Digital Person?

A) A computer technician who specializes in virtual world graphics
B) Anyone who has an avatar in Second Life
C) Someone who conducts business anonymously through an avatar
D) A computer program that simulates human behavior
E) A member of a political organization seeking to ban the Internet
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
How many registered "residents" are there in Second Life?

A) Several hundred
B) Approximately seven-hundred thousand
C) Nearly one million
D) More than eight million
E) More than fifty million
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
What philosophers call "metaphysics" is the same area of study that Aristotle called "first philosophy."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Which of the following is a materialist?

A) Kant
B) Leibniz
C) Berkeley
D) Descartes
E) None of the above
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Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Our word "metaphysics" is derived from a Greek term meaning "the books which come after the physics."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Which of the following would J. J.

A) Lightning
B) Gravitational fields
C) Neutrons
D) Light
E) Smart considers all of the above to be matter.
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Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Which philosophical theory explicitly rejects Cartesian interactionism?

A) Materialism
B) Idealism
C) Epiphenomenalism
D) Occasionalism
E) Neutral Monism
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Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Kant tries to resolve the conflict between free will and determinism by appealing to the difference between appearance and reality.
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Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
According to Descartes, every object in the physical universe has an immaterial spirit.
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k this deck
43
Kant says physical causation does not take place within the realm of appearance.
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k this deck
44
Modern neurophysiological explanations of voluntary actions are not materialistic.
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k this deck
45
If our actions are causally determined, we're never morally responsible for our actions.
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k this deck
46
"Autonomous" comes from a Greek expression meaning "beyond the law."
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k this deck
47
Both appetites and aversions are kinds of endeavors, according to Hobbes.
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k this deck
48
According to Kant, if the things we perceive are things-in-themselves, freedom is impossible.
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k this deck
49
Science, according to Kant, gives us knowledge of independent reality.
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k this deck
50
Hobbes divided all human motions into two sorts--vital motions and animal motions.
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k this deck
51
Hume believes that human actions have the same causal regularity that the movement of the planets does.
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k this deck
52
According to Smart, all psychological laws and properties are reducible to physical laws and properties.
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k this deck
53
Materialism is the only one-substance theory considered in this chapter.
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k this deck
54
Hobbes has no reply to the consciousness objection.
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k this deck
55
According to Hobbes, I can act "freely" even if my actions are causally determined.
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k this deck
56
Smart's central claim is that states of consciousness are identical with states of the brain.
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k this deck
57
The problem of other minds is an epistemological problem.
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k this deck
58
According to the traditional theory of substance, minds can only interact with other minds.
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k this deck
59
Hobbes believed there was no contradiction between saying i) that I did something freely, and ii) that I couldn't have chosen to do anything else.
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k this deck
60
According to the consciousness objection, we are not merely material beings.
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k this deck
61
All claims of identity reduce to claims of identity of meaning or sense.
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k this deck
62
According to Descartes, the fundamental property of mental substance is immortality.
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k this deck
63
According to our author, the mental is inextricably tied to the physical.
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k this deck
64
Avatars can contract virtually fatal diseases and virtually die. .
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65
Materialism and idealism are both kinds of monism.
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66
The university is an example of what Ryle calls a "category mistake."
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67
Sue Hoogestraat does not mind that her real life husband has a virtual wife in Second Life. .
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68
According to our author, Descartes' dream of a unified theory has not been achieved.
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69
Descartes attempted to articulate the teleological purposiveness of material nature.
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70
Descartes believed that mind and body were separate substances, and not just conceptual distinct.
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71
The identity of the evening and the morning star is only contingent identity.
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72
Ric Hoogestraat justifies his time spent in Second Life by comparing it to his wife's time spent watching television. .
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73
Contemporary philosophers rarely refer to the mind as a substance.
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74
Gilbert Ryle derived his dualistic view from Descartes.
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