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IDENTIFICATION
100

Question: Which perspective looks at all aspects of a given situation or problem to understand it completely?

A. Partial point of view                                         

B. Holistic perspective

C. Analytical division                                               D. Biased reasoning

Answer: B. Holistic perspective

100

OSETRCAS


Answer: SOCRATES

100

Question: Philosophy is etymologically defined as the "love of ______________________."

Answer: WISDOM

100

Explain the difference between a "Close-Up Lens" (partial view) and a "Wide-Angle Lens" (holistic perspective) when assessing a conflict between two friends.

A close-up lens isolates the immediate argument or words spoken out of anger (partial view). A wide-angle lens looks at the history of the friendship, home stressors, or misunderstandings that built up over time (holistic perspective).

100

Question: A statement or expression of personal taste, feeling, belief, or emotion that cannot be empirically proven true or false.

Answer: Opinion / Personal Opinion

200

Question: What does the Greek word Philos mean in the etymology of Philosophy?

A. Wisdom                                                             B. Knowledge    

C. Love                                                               D. Soul

Answer: C. Love

200

LICHOIST WVEI


Answer: HOLISTIC VIEW

200

Question: A truth is supported by ______________________ evidence, consensus, and objective reality, unlike an opinion

Answer: EMPIRICAL

200

Why is it instructionally crucial to distinguish between an argument's validity and its soundness when debating social issues or analyzing digital media?

Answer: An argument can be perfectly valid structurally (e.g., All dogs are cats; a Siamese is a dog; therefore, a Siamese is a cat) but completely false if the baseline premises are factually broken. Recognizing soundness prevents us from falling for elegant-sounding but fake information.

200

Question:The structural correctness of an argument where the conclusion logically and necessarily follows from the given premises.

Answer:Validity / Logical Validity

300

Question:

_____ Which philosophical term refers to the features of our existence that are given to us and cannot be changed, such as our biological parents, place of birth, and genetic makeup?

A. Transcendence                                                   B. Facticity

C. Spatial-Temporal Being                                       D. Body as Intermediary

Answer: B. Facticity

300

ITCIYTACT



Answer: FACTICITY

300

Question: We do not merely possess or reside in a physical body; rather, philosophers argue that we are our bodies, which defines us as an ______________________ spirit.

Answer: EMBODIED

300

How does your "Facticity" affect your possibilities for "Transcendence"? Provide a concrete example using your life as a student in Catbalogan City.

Answer: Facticity provides our starting parameters (e.g., being born into a family with financial limits in Catbalogan City). Transcendence is our choice to study resiliently, use local libraries, and work toward a degree to systematically change our trajectory.

300

Question: The core term used to describe an individual human being who possesses self-awareness, an interior life, and moral agency

Answer: Person

400

Question: 

When someone actively looks for, interprets, and remembers information in a way that confirms their preexisting personal beliefs, what psychological phenomenon are they demonstrating?

A. Information protocol                                           B. Confirmation bias

C. Socratic dialogue                                                 D. Logical validity

Answer: B. Confirmation bias

400

INNOIPO


Answer: OPINION

400

Question: While facticity restricts our physical placement, our nature as a ______________________ being means we can only occupy one specific location at one specific point in time.

Answer: SPATIAL-TEMPORAL

400

Describe how the Body as Intermediary can sometimes cause misunderstandings when you try to express a deep, genuine emotion to someone else.

Answer: : Since the spirit cannot directly telepathize its thoughts, it relies on the physical body (intermediary) like shaking hands, words, or facial expressions. Misunderstandings occur when the physical manifestation fails to accurately convey the deep internal intensity of our intentions

400

Question: The specific lens or metaphor that represents a narrow, analytical, or single-frame reaction to a real-life situation.

Answer: Close-Up Lens (or Partial point of view)

500

Question: Which method of philosophizing uses a series of disciplined, collaborative questions to uncover underlying assumptions and arrive at clearer truths?

A. Dialectic method                                               B. Socratic questioning       

C. Syllogistic showdown                                           D. Fallacy identification

Answer: B. Socratic questioning                   

500

ODBMEEDI


Answer: EMBODIED

500

Question: Adopting a ______________________ mindset allows a student to view failures and personal limitations not as final dead-ends, but as mandatory prerequisites for personal growth and breakthrough

Answer: GROWTH

500

How can practicing Socratic Questioning prevent a class discussion from turning into an aggressive conversational combat or toxic call-out culture online?

Answer: Instead of attacking a person's character, Socratic questioning frames inquiry as a collaborative pursuit of truth using objective prompts (e.g., "What evidence leads to that option?"), which creates a safe environment and protects personal dignity.

500

Question: The process of intentionally slowing down and applying an information-verification framework before sharing news or reacting to social media posts.

Answer: 30-Second Pause (or Information-Verification Protocol)