Argument
Natural Philosophy
Good and Evil
Potpourri
Phil in the Blank
100

The theory that Newton critiqued based on their hypotheses

Mechanism

100

The primary qualities of bodies

Size, shape, texture (arrangement of parts), motion

100

Wheatley's theological imagery that depicts moral evil

Black as Cain

100

Leibniz's definition of God

wise, all-powerful, and perfectly good

100

Hope was born in the state of ______

Texas

200

A critique of theism that comes in two varieties, a logical and evidential version

Problem of Evil

200

Philosopher who argued that the observed beauty and order of nature implies an intelligent designer

Newton

200

Leibniz's view of the world's future

Optimistic, or Progressive (getting better over time)

200

Sadra's definition of God

Being or perfection

200

Montoro's first critique is that jealousy ______ the beloved

debases or devalues 

300

The structure of a demonstrative argument for God's existence

Reasoning from cause to effect

300

Who maintained that bodily forms are not reducible to matter 

Aristotle or Aristotelians

300

Sadra's account of evil

privation, or a lack of perfection

300

Sadra's definition of created beings

Modulation of being, deficiency, ontological indigence, or ontological poverty 

300
_______ was a significant aspect of Newton, Boyle, and Sor Juana's social-political context. 
Church authority, or religion
400

Something whose opposite is a contradiction

Necessary

400

The qualities of body that are mind-dependent, on a mechanist view

Tastes, smells, tactile qualities, color, and sounds

400

What Wheatley compares chattel slavery to in the Dartmouth poem

British Tyranny

400

Sor Juana's philosophical methodology 

Start from personal experience and then generalize (e.g., final response to Montoro)

400

Leibniz posits that God is the _______ why there is something rather than nothing

reason

500

A presentation of a situation that provokes a greater self-awareness, either of your beliefs or experience

Thought Experiment

500

What Boyle and Newton excluded from the sphere of their scientific explanation

Soul, spirit, or mind

500

A metaphysical distinction that is key to how Leibniz reconciles evil with the goodness of creation

Parts versus wholes

500

The two examples that Sor Juana gives as an analogy for how jealousy naturally follows from love

wetness from water and smoke from fire

500

In "I beg you, SeƱora," Sor Juana writes that "If loving you is a sin, don't expect me to do ______"

penance