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PHIL 1010 Questions And Answers With Latest Quiz

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PHIL 1010 Questions And Answers With Latest Quiz An argument is valid just in case ANS if premises are true, then the conclusion must be true. Which is not true? ANS Arguments that contain nothing but true claims are always valid. If an argument for conclusion C is sound, then: ANS C must...

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  • November 5, 2024
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PHIL 1010 Questions And Answers With Latest Quiz
An argument is valid just in case ANS if premises are true, then the conclusion must be true.



Which is not true? ANS Arguments that contain nothing but true claims are always valid.



If an argument for conclusion C is sound, then: ANS C must be true



If an argument for conclusion C is invalid, then: ANS C could be false even if the premise is true.



If an argument for conclusion C is valid but unsound, then: ANS A premise must be false



Which is a premise in the argument from Ignorance ANS We do not know that we are mistaken



According to Descartes, the Dream Argument: ANS is weaker than the evil daemon argument



According to Descartes, The Evil Daemon Argument: ANS fails to show that nothing is certain



According to Russell, Sense Data: ANS are appearances



According to Russell Sense Data are not: ANS the same as physical objects



When an argument is self-defeating: ANS the conclusion is inconsistent with the premise



Begging the question is: ANS making a circular argument



According to Russell, the nature of matter is: ANS - not entirely like sense data
- described in part by physical science

, - strange



Which is the name of a valid argument form: ANS Modus Tollens



Which is the name of an invalid argument form: ANS denying the antecedent



T/F Every Unsound Argument has a false conclusion ANS False



Idealim is the view that: ANS everything is mind dependent



Russell's objection to Berkley's argument for Idealism is that: ANS the argument is based on
equivocation



(Cartesian) Dualism is the view that ANS some things are mind-dependent and other things are
material



Descartes' argument "I think; therefore I exist" proves: ANS that there is something that cannot
be reasonably doubted


Identify the flaw in the argument: "Mercury is a planet. Mercury is an element in my phone.
Therefore my phone contains a planet." ANS Equivocation


Identify the flaw in the argument: "Jupiter is larger than Mercury. Therefore Jupiter is larger than
Mercury." ANS begs the question


Identify the flaw in the argument: "Jupiter is larger than Mercury. Therefore Jupiter is smaller than
Mercury." ANS self-defeating



Gettiers assumptions about justification ANS Fallibalism
Justification tranfers through valid deduction

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