QUESTIONS
Question 1
The problem of personal identity is a species of the problem of _____.
| change | 
| relativism | 
| naturalism | 
| evolution | 
| creationism | 
Question 2
According to Locke, the identity conditions for persons are the same as for any mass of matter.
- True
 - False
 
Question 3
Patients who have undergone split brain surgery;
| develop two separate spheres of consciousness | 
| rarely live longer than a week | 
| are unable to look into a mirror | 
| lose their emotions | 
| have vivid and uncontrollable dreams | 
Question 4
According to animalism, a person who has undergone split brain surgery is still the same person as before.
- True
 - False
 
Question 5
A memory of an event that either didn’t happen or that was not caused by the event it records is a ____ memory.
| Real | 
| apparent | 
| imposter | 
| virtual | 
| Echo | 
Question 6
Locke argued that answering the problem of personal identity is important for ____.
| moral responsibility | 
| psycho-therapy | 
| evolution | 
| salvation | 
| physics | 
Question 7
According to the insufficiency objection to memory theory, our personal identity is determined by our memories and our ____.
| Souls | 
| Bodies | 
| Brains | 
| Desires | 
| all of these | 
Question 8
Locke maintains that you shouldn’t be held responsible for something you don’t remember doing.
- True
 - False
 
Question 9
Resurrection is theoretically possible according to animalism.
- True
 - False
 
Question 10
According to Parfit, numerical identity is important for survival.
- True
 - False
 
Question 11
Scientists cannot explain why near-death experiences have caused some people to have the sensation of leaving their bodies.
- True
 - False
 
Question 12
Our bodies may contain atoms that once belonged to another human being.
- True
 - False
 
Question 13
Properties: Enclosed plane geometric figure, Three exterior sides, and Interior angles add up to 180 degrees.
All of these are ______ properties of a triangle.
- Accidental
 - Essential
 
Question 14
An essential property of a bicycle is
| Horn | 
| red paint | 
| reflectors | 
| two wheels | 
| banana seat | 
Question 15
According to Locke, what is essential for living organisms, such as oak trees, to retain their identity over time is their:
| functional organization | 
| Soul | 
| Atoms | 
| Cells | 
Question 16
By dismissing counterexamples to their theory, psychological hedonists have made their theory
| untestable. | 
| interesting. | 
| informative. | 
| stronger. | 
| none of these | 
Question 17
According to the categorical imperative, any action is morally permissible as long as the outcome is good.
- True
 - False
 
Question 18
What makes an action right for someone is that it is approved by that person.
| ethical egoism | 
| categorical imperative | 
| subjective relativism | 
| virtue theory | 
| rule-utilitarianism | 
Question 19
Ewing’s Innocent Criminal thought experiment shows that utilitarianism is inconsistent with our notion of
| rights. | 
| happiness. | 
| duties. | 
| justice. | 
| pain. | 
Question 20
Mill argues that the happiness produced by various actions
| can differ not only in degree but also in kind. | 
| is the same. | 
| should not be measured. | 
| is irrelevant to ethics. | 
| none of these | 
Question 21
According to the principle of mercy, _____ suffering is wrong.
| All | 
| no amount of | 
| unnecessary | 
| human-inflicted | 
| unequal | 
Question 22
Emotivists claim that moral statements are
| meaningless. | 
| some times false. | 
| explanations. | 
| theories. | 
| always true. | 
Question 23
Equals should be treated equally according to the principle of
| Justice | 
| Mercy | 
| Parsimony | 
| Compassion | 
| conservatism | 
Question 24
Kant believes that animals are intrinsically valuable
- True
 - False
 
Question 25
You have a ___ right to something if and only if others have a duty not to interfere with your pursuit of that thing.
| Positive | 
| Negative | 
| god-given | 
| Equal | 
| inalienable | 
Question 26
According to Kant, all persons have all of the following characteristics except.
| self-conscious | 
| Rational | 
| Free | 
| Sentient | 
Question 27
Differing moral judgments are not necessarily the product of differing moral standards because the difference in judgment could be due to a difference in:
| factual beliefs | 
| environment | 
| cognition | 
| outcome | 
| none of these | 
Question 28
Utilitarianism does not require that the guilty be punished or that the punishment fit the crime.
- True
 - False
 
Question 29
According to Kant’s categorical imperative, which of the following is a necessary condition for the moral acceptability for an action?
| it does not violate any legal laws. | 
| everyone can act on it. | 
| it produces more happiness than unhappiness. | 
| it does not defy accepted social norms. | 
| none of these | 
Question 30
Part of the dilemma for Divine Command Theory is that if goodness is a defining attribute of God, then the theory is:
| circular | 
| Valid | 
| a matter of taste | 
| relative | 
| none of these | 
Question 31
Pascal believes that belief in God can be justified on
| rational grounds. | 
| pragmatic grounds. | 
| no grounds. | 
Question 32
Earthquakes, floods, and disease are examples of ____ evil.
| necessary | 
| primary | 
| secondary | 
| natural | 
| moral | 
Question 33
Pascal’s Wager is meant to be a proof for God’s existence.
- True
 - False
 
Question 34
The teleological argument excludes the possibility of polytheism.
- True
 - False
 
Question 35
The ancient Greeks, who believed in 12 gods, were
| agnostics. | 
| polytheists. | 
| monotheists. | 
| atheists. | 
| pantheists. | 
| deists. | 
Question 36
Hume discounts ancient reports of miracles like those found in the Bible because they come from
| sources of dubious credibility. | 
| trained observers. | 
| very educated people. | 
| demons. | 
Question 37
Which of the following best describes the concept of God at work in Descartes’ ontological argument?
| the perfect being | 
| creator of time | 
| human-like | 
| miracle worker | 
Question 38
Edward’s Gangle thought experiment shows that
| existence is not a defining property. | 
| God is infinite in nature. | 
| philosophy can one day discover God’s true essence. | 
| God must have a physical body. | 
| evolution cannot explain the existence of certain creatures. | 
Question 39
The scientific competitor to the God hypothesis that explains religious experiences is the
| hallucination hypothesis. | 
| alien hypothesis. | 
| supernatural hypothesis. | 
| mystic hypothesis. | 
Question 40
Vacuum fluctuations show that every event does not need a cause.
- True
 - False
 
Question 41
If the Kalam cosmological argument is sound, then it proves that God is
| none of these. | 
| omnibenevolent. | 
| omniscient. | 
| omnipotent. | 
| all of these. | 
Question 42
Some advocates of the free will defense try to justify natural evil by blaming it on
| Satan. | 
| poor design. | 
| St. Peter’s betrayal. | 
| botched scientific experiments. | 
| God’s inability to see the future. | 
Question 43
Logic demands that every series have a first member.
- True
 - False
 
Question 44
Omniscient means
| all-powerful. | 
| all-seeing. | 
| all-knowing. | 
| all-good. | 
| unchanging. | 
| eternal. | 
Question 45
A irreducibly complex system is a system that
| is infinite. | 
| would not work if one of its parts was removed. | 
| has a single part. | 
| never breaks down. | 
ANSWERS
Question 1
The problem of personal identity is a species of the problem of _____.
| change | 
| relativism | 
| naturalism | 
| evolution | 
| creationism | 
Question 2
According to Locke, the identity conditions for persons are the same as for any mass of matter.
- True
 - False
 
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