A classic philosophical definition of knowledge is

a. warrant.
b. justified true belief.
c. opinion.
d. epistemology.


ANS: B

Philosophy & Belief

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The questions "If the situation did not turn out as I had anticipated, how might I rethink this problem, minimize the damage my error may have caused, and make the best out of the position I now find myself in?"  are associated with which step in the I

EAS process? (a) Identify the problem and set priorities. (b) Determine relevant information and deepen understanding. (c) Enumerate options and anticipate consequences. (d) Assess the situation and make a preliminary decision. (e) Scrutinize the process and self-correct as needed.

Philosophy & Belief

"According to a White House spokesman, charges that the Justice Department fired attorneys for partisan political reasons are a smokescreen. He declared ‘What you have is partisanship on Capitol Hill

Members of one party have no business accusing members of the other of the very thing they do themselves'." commits the fallacy of A) ad hominem B) beside the point C) straw man

Philosophy & Belief

Pragmatism has been universally accepted

Indicate whether the statement is true or false.

Philosophy & Belief

Determine which of the lettered claims below is equivalent to the following: Steve can neither be tested nor give blood. (This is easy to do if you symbolize the claims first and have some familiarity either with truth tables or with the Group II rules for derivations-the truth-functional equivalences.)A. If Steve can give blood, then he has been tested.B. If Steve has been tested, then he can give blood.C. Steve cannot give blood, and he has not been tested.D. Steve has not been tested, but he can give blood.

Fill in the blank(s) with the appropriate word(s).

Philosophy & Belief