Which of the following is not included in calculating the amount of happiness?
A) Cost
B) Intensity
C) Likelihood
D) Duration
A
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INSTRUCTIONS: Select the best translation for each categorical proposition. None but kind people are well intentioned
A) No kind people are people who are not well intentioned. B) Some well intentioned people are kind people. C) All kind people are well intentioned people. D) All well intentioned people are kind people. E) Some kind people are not well intentioned people.
Throughout this test, write your answer on the form provided. Erasure marks may cause the grading machine to mark your answer wrong. INSTRUCTIONS: The following selections relate to distinguishing arguments from nonarguments and identifying conclusions. Select the best answer for each. The 300 million people who live in the U.S. make up just 5% of the world's population, but they consume a
quarter of the world's oil supply. For much of the twentieth century, the U.S. was the world's largest oil producer, and its profligacy wasn't a pressing problem. Today, however, we are only the third-largest producer, behind Saudi Arabia and Russia. In terms of proven reserves, we have slipped to tenth place in the international rankings. John Cassidy, "Pump Dreams" A) Argument; conclusion: For much of the twentieth century ... a pressing problem. B) Nonargument. C) Argument; conclusion: In terms of proven reserves ... international rankings. D) Argument; conclusion: The 290 million people who live ... world's oil supply. E) Argument; conclusion: Today, however ... Saudi Arabia and Russia.
What, according to James, are vital elements of the good life?
a. Struggle and love b. Struggle and effort c. Effort and love d. Love and religion
W. M. Brown considers the argument that performance enhancing drugs are dangerous to
the athletes that use them, and he gives two answers to that argument: first, that it is excessively paternalistic; and second, that it is a. factually false, since such drugs do not pose health risks. b. hypocritical, since few object to much more serious dangers associated with many athletic activities. c. a futile and useless objection, since once performance enhancing drugs are available there is no way to effectively prevent their use. d. counterproductive, because trying to ban the drugs on the basis of health risks will only lead to the use of more masking agents to prevent detection, and those agents may be more harmful than the performance enhancing drugs themselves. e. so vague as to be meaningless, given that there is no effective way to measure any increased risk to long-term health that results specifically from such drugs.