All moral beliefs ______ non-moral beliefs

A. are separate from any
B. depend on some
C. entail some
D. have evidence from


B

Philosophy & Belief

You might also like to view...

How does Socrates differ from other Athenians?

A) Socrates is aware of his ignorance. B) Socrates does not know anything and the Athenians know much. C) Socrates fears death, but the Athenians do not. D) Socrates seeks wealth, but the Athenians seek virtue.

Philosophy & Belief

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. We are immersed in life. We breathe it in, we walk on it, we touch it. Each footstep on a fertile lawn or forest

mat will send tremors to trillions of bacteria, millions of algae, fungi, and protozoa, and hundreds of insects and worms. The skin on our bodies, when viewed microscopically, is a teeming matrix of tiny caverns filled with bacteria, viruses, and mites. So dense are the unseen life forms on our bodies that they form an almost complete shell about each of us. Gary S. Moore, Living with the Earth, 3rd ed. A) Argument; conclusion: Each footstep on a fertile lawn ... of insects and worms. B) Nonargument. C) Argument; conclusion: We breathe it in, we walk on it, we touch it. D) Argument; conclusion: We are immersed in life. E) Argument; conclusion: So dense are the unseen life forms ... about each of us.

Philosophy & Belief

According to Dewey, ethical investigations typically: a. function much like scientific investigations. b. function not at all like scientific investigations, since they are completelysubjective in nature. c. function not at all like scientific investigations, since it is assumed that peoplealready know what to value. d. all of these choices

e. none of these choices.

Philosophy & Belief

Since reason can give us very little guidance in living our lives, Hume recommends

a. total skepticism. b. mitigated skepticism. c. an irrational but fervent leap of faith to religious belief. d. suicide.

Philosophy & Belief