INSTRUCTIONS: In each problem below you are given a statement, its truth value in parentheses, and an operation/relation to be performed on that statement. You must identify the new statement and the truth value of the new statement. Adopt the Aristotelian standpoint and assume that 'A' and 'B' denote things that actually exist. No non-A are B. (T) Conversion

A) No non-B are A. (Und.)

B) No A are non-B. (T)

C) No B are non-A. (T)

D) All non-A are non-B. (T)

E) All non-A are B. (F)


C

Philosophy & Belief

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Jeremy Bentham thought that a community is no more than the individuals who compose it and that the interests of the

community are simply the sum of the interests of its members.

a. True b. False

Philosophy & Belief

The Epicurean social philosophy taught that

a. we have a duty to work for the moral improvement of the state. b. the civil laws are derived from the divine law. c. political power should be given only to those in the aristocratic class. d. we should withdraw from the burdens of political involvements.

Philosophy & Belief

The view that the mind interacts with the body is a problem for substance dualists like Descartes because it raises questions like

A. how can something with no physical properties affect something physical? B. how can the mind survive the death of the body? C. how can the existence of the mind be known? D. how can the existence of bodies be known?

Philosophy & Belief

Answer the following statement(s) true (T) or false (F)

1. Most scholars accept the argument of Irenaeus, a second century CE church leader, who stated the Revelation was composed late in the reign of Roman emperor Nero. 2.Unlike Jews, Jewish and Gentile Christians were expected to worship the emperor cult that formed around several Roman emperors such as Vespasian and Domitian. 3. Revelation's chief purpose was to strengthen the faith of those who wavered in the face of official and unofficial persecution. 4. The book's structure resembles a triangle, with the narrative beginning on Earth, ascending to Heaven, then returning to Earth for its conclusion. 5. At the conclusion of the narrative, the author combines images from Isaiah and other Israelite prophets to describe the dazzling heavenly city.

Philosophy & Belief