A fundamental criticism that Copp and Sobel make of Hursthouse's account of virtue is
that it fails to fulfill Hursthouse's goal of offering
a. a full and final listing of all the virtues.
b. an account that enables us to make cross-cultural comparisons of the virtues.
c. a purely logical and rationalist foundation for the virtues.
d. an account of the virtues that fits all cultures and all historical epochs.
e. a naturalistic account of the virtues.
e
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_____'s Theologico-Political Treatise demonstrates a dislike of popular religion
A. Pascal B. Aristotle C. Leibniz D. Spinoza
One of Locke’s beliefs that Berkeley rejects is
a) Locke’s belief in God. b) Locke’s distinction between primary and secondary qualities. c) Locke’s claim that reason is the source of all knowledge. d) Locke’s distinction between simple and compound ide
For any inductive argument,
A) its premises could be true and its conclusion false. B) it could not have false premises and a false conclusion. C) its premises cannot be false if its conclusion is true.
In “The Second Sex,” Beauvoir notes that women are regarded as
A. feminine B. the boss C. the womb D. the caretaker