Philosophy: Final Exam
Locke's understanding of Substance
Dualist, can't prove it but there is material stuff
The 4 branches of philosophy and what they investigate?
Epistemology: what is knowledge Metaphysics: conditions for reality, causes, first principles, study of knowledge
cogito ergo sum? deus sive natura? tabula rasa? esse est percipi?
Era of writing in Latin: I think therefore I am (Descartes), God or nature (Spinoza), Blank slate, To be is to be perceived (Berkeley)
Descartes?
Father of modern philosophy, rationalist, dualist
Primary vs secondary qualities
Primary: objective, measure, height, width hardest ones to get to Secondary: subjective, must go through first to find objective (primary)
Ancient Skeptic?
Pyrrho, pyrronianism
What set is the evil genius supposed to undermine?
Mathematical beliefs
Apple basket metaphor?
Mind is the basket, apples that look good are good beliefs, rotten apple is a bad belief, must dump whole basket to find the rotten apple and replace good apples one by one
How do we know what categories are transcendental categories according to class lecture?
Necessary features of experience, thought experiment to come to the necessary features of experience without sensation; Kant believes we enter the world with the idea of space and time
Deduction follows with necessity i.e. it is impossible to be otherwise
Necessary: impossible to be otherwise
Locke?
No innate ideas, you are born blank, first empiricist, dualist, material world, physical and mental substance
Spinoza?
Not a dualist, makes his own system, a monist, since everything is one substance God and nature are the same, everything is determined no free will, pantheist monist
The name of Locke's major epistemological writing?
an Essay concerning human understanding
What does the Latin phrase tabula rasa mean?
blank slate
Immanuel Kant is best said to be?
both an empiricist and a rationalist
According to class lecture, Leibniz believes innate ideas are said to be?
both implicit and explicit
Hume: impressions and ideas
calls everything perceptions (concepts) and impressions (ideas)
According to David Hume, what unwarranted claim do people make when seeing a constant conjunction between two occurrences?
cause and effect
What specific definition is given to the word 'necessary' in modern philosophy?
impossible to be otherwise
According to Immanuel Kant, 'analytic' propositions (as opposed to 'synthetic' propositions) are said to coincide with?
relations of ideas
According to Kant, for there to be 'experience' at all, you must have both?
sensation and intellect
In the cookie press analogy offered in class, the 'unstructured blob' is supposed to represent what feature of Kant's understanding of how we obtain experience?
sensation without the structural features of the mind
Synthetic a priori knowledge?
we can have a synthetic, a priori knowledge; this exists even on two different sides of the list; cause and effect, mathematics, time and space, self identity, the world
a priori vs a posteriori
A priori: Deduction, Analytic, Relations of Ideas, Necessary, eyes closed and uses the mind, world of the necessary, favored more my rationalist but they want BOTH A Posteriori: Induction, Synthetic, Matters of Fact, Contingent, eyes open
Leibniz and innate ideas?
Both explicit and implicit
What philosophical school does Kant best fit into?
Both rationalist and empiricist
Kant?
Both, rationalist and empiricist, time and space, a treaty concerning human and understanding
Analytic vs synthetic
Analytic: relations of ideas Synthetic: matters of fact, a priori
Pyrrho?
Ancient skeptic, more radical than Hume
Floating Man Thought Experiment?
Arabic Philosopher, Ibnsina; If you were born with zero sensations floating in air, would you have awareness of self? Yes.
Axiom
Assumption, starting belief, self evident assumption you never prove
Radical Idealism?
Berkeley, you create the world, selopcism, called himself an immaterialist
Mostly blind man with glasses and cookie press analogies What does the blindness represent? What do the glasses represent?
Blindness: blob of pure sensation Glasses: framework of the mind
Cookie Press Analogy: What does the unstructured blob of dough represent? What does the cookie press represent?
Blob: pure sensation Cookie press: conceptual framework of the mind
Method of Doubt?
Descartes, looking for certainty and a foundation for science, doubts methodologies, needs a single reason to doubt and whole system is thrown out
Berkeley?
Cant assume a material world, only God's ideas
Locke's three processes of the mind?
Compounding, relating, abstracting to form into complex ideas, does not help in the end
continental rationalists vs British empiricists
Continental rationist: Descartes, Spinoza, Liebniz, Kant British Empericist: Hume, Berkeley, Locke, Kant
Thomas Reid?
Critic of Hume from his own era and place
Berkeley on Primary and Secondary Qualities
He doesn't like them, primary and secondary are one in the same, formally collapses idea
Resemblance, contiguity, cause and effect
Hume's 3 categories
Thomas Reid critiques?
Hume, a Common Sense philosopher
What is the certain truth Descartes reaches?
I think, therefore I am; I can doubt whether I exist or not
What is the cause of ideas according to Locke, what is the cause of ideas according to Berkeley
Locke: a material world Berkeley: God
Induction follows with probability/contingency; it is possible to otherwise without contradiction
Induction: probability
Leibniz?
Innate ideas and recall, part of psychological makeup
According to Kant, how do you know when a category is a 'transcendental structure' of the mind?
It is impossible to think about experience without it
Categories of transcendental structures of the mind?
Kant; what has to be in place to understand experience: thought and meditation, we don't experience space, we only see objects in space, can't imagine an object without space, mediate on the necessary features of experience which are time ad space
How is knowledge viewed by each school?
Rationist: a priori, more primary source, but embrace both Empiricist: a posteriori
Relations of ideas vs matters of fact
Relations: A priori Matters of Fact: a posteriori
Kant's understanding of experience: sensation vs structural features of the mind
Sensation: blob Structural framework of the mind: outline, needed to understand world around you
Hume's position on knowledge?
Skeptic
Hume?
Skeptic, if you can't see with your senses you have no founding, ideas not found on impressions are useless and empty, no grounding without impressions and sensation, never seen causation only effects, we are conditioned to assume causes, writes in English, Ideas not based on impressions are useless and empty
What philosophical positions is Berkeley contending against?
Skeptics, atheists, and materialists
Descartes' major written work?
The Mediations of First Philosophy
3 fundamental sets of beliefs according to Descartes?
Ways of confirming the world: outside world (shadows on wall), shadows of own self (own shadows), mathematical beliefs
This branch of philosophy asks the question, what is knowledge?
epistemology
