Descartes believed that his universal method of reasoning based on mathematical principles was the result of divine revelation.
True - False
Descartes' philosophy was inspired by a series of dreams.
True - False
Innate ideas are truths that are not derived from observation or experiment.
True - False
Descartes insisted that we reject efforts to understand the world with mathematical precision.
True- False
A priori ideas are derived from experience.True- False
Descartes argued that the idea of God is acquired from experience.True- False
Descartes was the first philosopher to study the process of thinking itself.
True- False
Descartes applied the Scholastic model to his study of science and philosophy.True- False
Descartes believed that we are born with certain ideas implanted in us by God.
True- False
Descartes reasoned that his ideas of body and mind must be correct, since God allowed him to know clearly and distinctly that he is both.
True- False
Descartes attacked earlier philosophy on the grounds that it _____.
did not demand rational comprehension from the individual intellect
In order to reach his target audience, Descartes wrote in _____.
everyday French
The work of _____ anticipated Descartes' Meditations by five hundred years.
Abu Hamid Muhammad al-Ghazali
Descartes' standard of truth rests on _____.
a combination of empirical evidence and divine revelation
Descartes begins his Meditations by seeing if it is possible to _____.doubt everything
Descartes introduces _____ as a device to raise the possibility of ultimate delusion.
the evil genius
Descartes discovers one absolutely un-doubtable truth:
I think, therefore I exist.
18.According to the _____ , the body is a fleshy machine.
Cartesians
_____ is the term for any philosophical position that divides existence into two distinct substances.
Dualism
20. Cartesian dualism generates the _____ problem.
mind-body
Chapter 10
1. The correspondence theory of truth holds that an idea is true if whatever it refers to actually exists.True-False2. David Hume thought that most metaphysical speculations are irrelevant to the lives of ordinary people.True-False3. ...