Study Guide for the Fourth Examination
A note of explanation: There is no guarantee that all the questions on
the examination will be taken from this study guide. However, any student
who knows, understands, and is able to formulate clearly the answers to
all the questions on this study guide should do quite well on the
examination. A student who can give answers to practically none of the
questions on this study guide will very likely do rather poorly on the
examination.
Format of the Examination
This examination counts as fifteen percent (15%) of your course
grade.
This is a closed-book, in-class examination on the scheduled
date.
There will be two parts.
- Part I (for ten (10) points) will ask you to answer ten (10) "short
answer" questions worth one (1) point each. By "short answer" I mean that a
sentence or two (or three) will suffice.
- Part II (for five (5) points) will ask you to answer one (1) essay
question worth five (5) points. You will have a choice from two (2)
questions on this part. By "essay" I mean a discussion
that will probably take more than a paragraph or two, but should take no
more than a few pages.
Ground Rules
As always, cheating will not be tolerated. No help in answering the
questions may be received from anyone (except yourself) during the examination.
You may not use books or notes during the examination.
Sample Questions and Points to Study
- In the beginning of his article on dependence of the mind on the
body,
Edwards lays out two assumptions. What are these assumptions and why does
he make them?
- Hume argued that the mind totally "dissolves" at death. What was his
argument?
- Explain J.J.C. Smart's view on what mental states are.
- What point was Edwards' trying to make in talking about Alzheimer's
disease?
- Some people claim that even if the body and the mind both are
destroyed
at death, still the soul remains, so someone can survive death.
What is Edwards' response to this claim?
- What does Searle mean by "Strong AI?"
- What does Searle mean by "formal symbol manipulation?"
- Explain Searle's "Chinese room" thought experiment. What conclusions
does Searle draw from this thought experiment? Is he right to draw these
conclusions? Why or why not?
- Searle wrote "Syntax is not sufficient for semantics." What did he
mean
by that? What conclusions does he draw from this about the ability of
computers, as computers, to think? How does the argument go? Is he
right? Why or why not?
- What is "intentionality," as that term is used by John Searle.
- Could some computer in the future actually think? Why or wny
not? Critically discuss.
- Searle imagines some replies to his Chinese room argument. Explain
one
of these replies and what Searle's response to it is. Who is right on
this issue? Explain.
- Searle talks of "crazy realizations?" What's that all about?
- According to Searle what is needed for something to be able to
think?
- Explain the "Brownson" thought experiment.
- How does Parfit define "q-memory." Give an example of
something that is q-remembered by someone. Explain.
- Parfit considers the question "What happens to me?" if my brain
is split and put into two bodies. What is the answer? Carefully explain
Parfit's argument for this. Critically discuss the argument.
- How does Parfit argue that I could not be both people if my
brain were split and put into two bodies?
- Explain Epicurus's views about our knowledge of God. Critically
discuss.
- Explain Epicurus's reasoning that "death is nothing to us." Does that
mean that death is not bad? Explain.
- What was Epicurus's attitude towards death? Critically discuss his
defense of this attitude.
- What desires would Epicurus regard as unnecessary or vain?
- Epicurus thinks that pleasure is "the first good." Explain Epicurus's
view on whether we should seek pleasures, and his views on what pleasures,
if any, we should avoid, and why. Critically discuss.
- Why, according to Epicurus, should we not choose every pleasure?
Explain.
- Explain the sort of life Epicurus thinks we should live.
- Explicate and critique Epicurus's view of justice. What is justice,
on his view, and why should we be just?
- What principle does Mill accept as the fundamental principle of
morals? Give an example of its application.
- How would a utilitarian go about determining whether it would be
right for the United States government to bomb Iraq?
- John Stuart Mill
distinguishes a utilitarian "theory of life" from a "theory of
morality."
Explain what each of these is and how they are related.
- What, according to John Stuart Mill, is happiness? Explain in
some detail what Mill says about happiness.
- How does Mill respond to the objection that his utilitarian doctrine
is "a doctrine worthy only of swine ...?" Critically discuss.
- Mill claims that pleasures differ in quality as well as in
quantity.
What does Mill mean by this and what support does he offer for the claim?
Critically discuss.
- J. S. Mill claims that some pleasures have "higher value" than other
pleasures. Explain his argument for this claim. Critically discuss.
- Explain the distinction Mill draws between being happy and
being content.
- John Stuart Mill claimed that "It is better to be a human being
dissatisfied than a pig satisfied, better to be Socrates dissatisfied than
a fool satisfied." Critically discuss his argument for this claim.
- Some people who have experienced the "higher" or mental pleasures
still at times choose sensual pleasures instead. How does Mill account
for this? Critically discuss.
- How does Mill think we are to decide which pleasures are more worth
having? Is this method reasonable? Critically discuss.
- Explicate and critically discuss the argument John Stuart Mill offers
that "the sole evidence it is possible to produce that any thing is desirable,
is that people do actually desire it."
- John Stuart Mill has been amply criticized for this passage: "The
only
proof capable of being given that an object is visible is that people
actually see it. The only proof that a sound is audible is that people
hear it; and so of the other sources of our experience. In like manner, I
apprehend, the sole evidence it is possible to provide that anything is
desirable is that people do actually desire it." What evidence is it
possible to provide that something is desirable? (To answer this you will
have to discuss what it means for something to be desirable.)
- John Stuart Mill writes: "each person's happiness is a good to that
person; and the general happiness, therefore, is a good to the aggregate
of all persons." Explicate and critically discuss this argument.
- According to Epictetus: "Some things are up to us, some are not up to
us." What does Epictetus think is up to us? What does he think
is not up to us? What conclusions does he draw from this concerning how
we can be happy? Critically discuss.
- Summarize and critique Epictetus' prescription for happiness, being
sure to mention any central distinctions Epictetus draws in his discussion of
how to be happy.
- Epictetus wrote, "It is not things that upset people but rather
ideas about things." What does this mean? Is it right?
What conclusions does he draw from this concerning who is to blame for
unhappiness? Critically discuss.
- Epictetus wrote, "men are disturbed not by the things which happen,
but
by the opinions about the things ..." What does this mean? Is it right?
What conclusions does he draw from this concerning who is to blame for
unhappiness? Critically discuss.
- "Remember that in life you ought to behave as at a banquet." Who said
this? What does it mean? What are its implications? Critically discuss.
- According to Epictetus what attitude should we have if our spouse or
child dies? Why? Critically discuss.
Richard Lee,
rlee@uark.edu,
last modified: 4 December 2002