This is the philosophical belief that there are no moral statements.
What is noncognitivism?
100
Adding up each number and dividing by the number of numbers will give you this kind of average.
What is mean?
100
This is what the straw man or easy target fallacy is.
What is the fallacy where you make an inaccurate claim about the views of someone else, argue that the inaccurate view is false and assert that the person's actual view is false?
100
Where's Waldo?
What is a question?
100
This is what we call the problem of ignorance.
What is "the problem that we do not know everything"?
200
This is the moral theory that judges whether an action is right or wrong based on the outcome that action will have.
What is consequentialism?
200
In a statistical argument the feature that the observed entities have is called this.
What is relevant property?
200
This is the fallacy of attacking a person rather than arguing against the view that a person asserts.
What is Ad Hominem Fallacy?
200
I won!
What is an exclamation?
200
These are the two main factors to consider when evaluating the form of a statistical argument.
What is size and variety?
300
This is the moral theory that "What Would Jesus Do" bracelets would fall under. (Must give its exact name "____ moral arguments")
What is Aretaic moral arguments?
300
Your G.P.A. is an example of this specific sort of average.
What is weighted mean?
300
This is the fallacy where the premise of an argument asserts, usually in a hidden way, the conclusion of the argument.
What is begging the question?
300
Juice is the only drink that will actually hydrate you.
What is a statement?
300
This is a test 18th century German Philosopher Immanuel Kant thought could be used to see if an action was good.
What is seeing if that action was universalizable?
400
This is the specific name for a moral theory that judges whether an action is right or wrong based on the pleasure or pain that it causes.
What is Hedonism?
400
This is what you call a sample when the proportions of every subgroup in the target is exactly matched by the proportions of these subgroups in the sample.
What is a (perfectly) representative sample?
400
This is what the fallacy is called when you go from correlation to causation.
What is Hasty Cause?
400
Raise your hand if you want to be called on.
What is a command?
400
These are the questions you want to ask to determine if something is a statement or not and if you want to determine whether something is an argument or not. (There are two separate questions here - you need both of them.)
What is "Can it be true or false?" and "Is there an attempt to convince?"
500
This is the second premise in the generic form for a Deontological moral argument. (You must get close to actual wording and get terms correct.)
What is "It is morally good/bad to do actions with intrinsic feature F1"?
500
In the generic form for general statistical arguments this is the only premise. Must have letters right (or what the terms are that are associated with those letters).
What is "P% of the N observed entities in G have F"?
500
This is the fallacy of hasty generalization.
What is the fallacy called when a statistical argument uses a sample that is too small?
500
I will take 5 points away if you don't raise your hand.
What is a statement?
500
These are what you call the two parts of an explanation.