Answer the following statement(s) true (T) or false (F)
1. In Pascal’s wager there is not even a finite gain to be had in not believing in God and there is nothing lost in believing in God.
2. W. K. Clifford argued that believing has moral ramifications.
3. The text described James’s position as direct volitionalism.
4. The text described Søren Kierkegaard’s religious position as "one of history’s most brutal attacks on existentialism."
5. Søren Kierkegaard thought that one’s faith ought to be adjusted in the light of the latest scholarship.
F 1. In Pascal’s wager there is not even a finite gain to be had in not believing in God and there is nothing lost in believing in God.
T 2. W. K. Clifford argued that believing has moral ramifications.
T 3. The text described James’s position as direct volitionalism.
F 4. The text described Søren Kierkegaard’s religious position as "one of history’s most brutal attacks on existentialism."
F 5. Søren Kierkegaard thought that one’s faith ought to be adjusted in the light of the latest scholarship.
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Answer the following statement(s) true (T) or false (F)
Sound arguments can have false conclusions.
The first Christian martyr was:
a. Peter b. Stephen c. Paul d. James the son of Zebedee
Karl Marx claimed that a synthesis of owners and workers would produce:
1. capitalism. 2. anarchism. 3. communism. 4. democracy.
An alternative to trying to confirm that the claim is true, a strong critical thinker may set about trying to.__________
(a) confirm the claim (b) disconfirm the claim (c) ignore the claim (d) have faith in the claim (e) suspend judgment