Fighting Words
Yesterdays
Long Library Talk
German Bachelors
Mixed Bag
100

How did Clifford define a "true belief" - that is, something that you really believe? 

True belief affects your action, it has practical consequences for you. 
100

For Philo, what are three qualities of God that we cannot affirm if we base our reasoning exclusively on experience of the world? 

Infinity

Perfection

Unity

100

What's the difference between Revealed Religion and Natural Religion, for Hume? What sources do each rely on? 

Revealed religion derives from Scripture and Tradition.

Natural Religion derives from Reason and Experience. 

100

How does Schleiermacher define religion? How does his definition support tolerance?  

In terms of intuition and feeling the Infinite.

 No one can regulate the intuitions of others. 

100

Who said that religion is "an issue of maximal concernment"?

Who said that religion is about "ultimate concern"?

What did they mean?

John Locke = Maximal Concernment 

Paul Tillich = Ultimate Concern

That Religion is something you can't not think about to live a satisfying life. That "God" is our ultimate value, even if you don't call it "God."

200

What is evidentialism?

Does Clifford promote a weak or strong version of it? How so? 

Evidentialism = our beliefs should be supported/justified by (sufficient) evidence.

Strong version = no exceptions for any beliefs or anyone (Clifford). 

Weak version = some reasonable exceptions. 

200

What's the difference between an Empiricist and an Absolutist for James? 

Empiricist: could be wrong, not absolutely certain when I know that I know things.

Absolutist: we can be certain when we know things. 

200

What view/positions do each of the main characters in Hume's Dialogue represent? 

Demea: Mysticism (piety > philosophy)

Cleanthes: Deism/Theism (Rational religion)

Philo: Skepticism 

200

How does Feuerbach define the essence of religion? 

Projection thesis: we project our best qualities outward onto an object.

Concealment thesis: religion is what hides this from us, and reveals our own true nature in God.

200

What historical event caused Enlightenment philosophers to seek a new foundation for Religion that was not Tradition or Scripture? 

The 30 years war (1618-1648) In Europe (which killed millions of people over religious divisions). 

300

What was William James's main thesis in "The Will to Believe," his main objection to Clifford?

When a question is forced and momentous and alive, we not only can but *must* make a passional decision between hypothesis.

300

How does James define a "genuine option" when it comes to our beliefs? 

- Forced: Unavoidable 

- Living hypotheses: both options make appeal to your will (both possibly true). 

- Momentous: the choice makes a huge difference. 

300

What's the difference between apriori and aposteriori arguments? Give an example of each. 

Apriori: independent of experience of world (cosmological argument, ontological argument)

Aposteriori: dependent on experience of the world (design argument, argument from suffering)

300

Where/how do religious ideas originate, according to Freud? Where do they come from? 

Are deepest, oldest desires (for security and Fatherly protection and love). They are psychological needs (wish-fulfillments).

Also function of civilization as coercion mechanism.

300

Where do religious beliefs come from, according to Justin Barret? 

From the way our minds are hardwired, (Not from mere superstition or stupidity). 

400

What does Dawkins illustrate in his article related to Clifford's argument? 

That there is real-world danger at risk in how people (anywhere on the planet) form their beliefs. 

(and that Religion is dangerous). 

400

What's James's point about the scientific method? 

That it makes 1 passional/volition choice/fear/anxiety (avoiding error) the standard for all inquiry. 

400

What was the "rule" or method that Cleanthes used to argue for the existence of God? 

Life effects = Like causes (design argument)

400

Why does Civilization/Culture make individuals unhappy, for Freud? 

Because it requires the sacrifice and renunciation of our desires. 

400

What are some of the main differences between reflective and non-reflective beliefs for Barrett? 

Reflective beliefs: rational, slowly-processed, verbally communicated, less reflective of action, etc.

Non-reflective: pre-rational, quickly-processed, non-verbal, more consistent with our actions, etc.

500

According to William James, what is the fundamental (passional/volitional) decision that human beings must sometimes make when faced with a dilemma of knowledge? 

To either (1) avoid error or (2) risk error for the Truth. 
500

What was James's critique of Pascal's Wager? 

That we can't will things to be true that we know to be false. 

500

What were the three main transitions in the dialogue between Cleanthes, Demea, and Philo?

Aposteriori (design argument) -->
Apriori (cosmological/ontological arguments) --> Feeling (suffering)

500

What's Feuerbach's stance on mysticism (can't say anything positive or clear about God)?

That it's a form of atheism because everything that exists is finite/determinate. 

500

What art piece is depicted on the first page of our syllabus? 

Gustave Dore’s image of the beatific vision, from Dante's, Paradiso, Divine Comedy.