Exam III Review Sheet
Knowledge
and Reality
Philosophy 120
Sectioons 001 and 002
Format: The exam
will consist of two parts: short answer
and long answer. There will be 6-8 short answer questions of which you
pick
4-5. Answers should be anywhere from one to five sentences. There will
be
3-5 long answer questions, of which you pick 2. Answers should be about
2
blue-book
pages, front and back. If you are taking the exam, you may either
(i) take an IN-CLASS exam on
THURSDAY MAY 20th at 2:00pm-4:00pm in King 306, or
(ii) take a 24-Hour
TAKE-HOME that will be distributed via email Friday, May 21 at 11am and
will be DUE SATURDAY MAY, 22 at 11AM.
I will be expecting more thorough ansewers if you decide to to take the
take-home exam. And,
of course, you may always opt to write the paper. If you write the
paper, it will be due THURSDAY MAY 20th at 4pm if you are in section
001 or SATURDAY MAY 22 at 11am if you are in section 002. There will be
a brief
review in class on the last day of class, and on the discussion forum,
if you
choose to use it. If you have any questions, please let me know.
Some Terms
Deductive Arguments
Valid/Invalid
Sound
Inductive
Arguments
Strong/Weak
Cogent
Possible Worlds
A Priori
A Posteriori
The Free Will Thesis
Causal Determinism
Incompatibilism
Hard Determinism
Libertarianism
Compatibilism
Leibniz's
Law
Weirob's Challenge
The Soul View
Dualism
Materialism
Intensional Fallacy
Person Stages/Temporal Parts
Memory View of Personal
Identity
Body View of Personal Identity (Weirob's position)
Eliminativism
Sorites Arguments
One Bit No Diff Principle
Perdurantism
Endurantism
Eternalism
Presentism
Tree
and the Cellulose
Statue and the Clay (if we get to it)
Body/Body
Minus (if we get to it)
Principles, Arguments, and
Objections
The Free Will Problem
Arguments against
Dualism: elusiveness of spirit, correlation of minds
and bodies, location of spirits, continuity of nature (evolution and
individual growth)
Arguments for Dualism: from semantic properties, aesthetic properties,
modal properties, from location, ineffability of qualia, possibility of
ghosts and zombies, argument from free will, Descartes' knowledge
argument
Body Translplant Case (for Memory
View of Personal Identity)
Fission (or Duplication) Case (against
Brain Identity and Memroy View)
Intransitivity of Memory Objection to Memory View
Unger's Sorites
Argument for Eliminativism about persons (i.e., that he does not exist)
The Puzzle
of Change
Options in Response to the Puzzle of Change
Perdurantist's Response to the Puzzle of Change
Endurantist's Response to the Puzzle of Change
Why Hinchliff thinks that neither the Perdurantist and Endurantist
solve the Puzzle
Hinchliff's Response to the Puzzle of Change
Page Last Updated: May 10, 2010