Epistemology Basics
The Great Epistemologists
Ethical Theories
The Big Four
Applying Moral Theory
100

What does “epistemology” mean?

The study of knowledge, how we know what we know.

100

Which philosopher wrote about the “Allegory of the Cave”?

Plato.

100

What does “ethics” study?

Moral principles about right and wrong action.

100

This philosopher developed virtue ethics

Aristotle

100

In Aristotle’s ethics, how does someone become virtuous?

By practicing virtuous actions until they form virtuous habits.

200

What is the traditional definition of knowledge?

Justified true belief.

200

What is Plato’s view of true knowledge?

Knowledge is gained through reason and understanding of the unchanging Forms, not through the senses.

200

The three main branches of ethics

Metaethics, normative ethics, and applied ethics.

200

According to Aristotle, this is the goal of human life.

Happiness

200

According to Kant, which action has moral worth: telling the truth out of duty, or telling the truth because it feels good?

Telling the truth out of duty.

300

What is empiricism?

The view that knowledge comes from experience and sense perception.

300

What method did Descartes use to find certain knowledge?

Methodic doubt, doubting everything that can be doubted to find something indubitable.

300

The three main types of normative ethical theories

Virtue ethics, deontological ethics, and consequentialist ethics.

300

According to Singer, this makes an action morally right

Production of the greatest good for the greatest number (utilitarianism).

300

In utilitarianism, why might lying sometimes be morally right?

Because if lying produces the greatest overall happiness, it is justified.

400

What is rationalism?

The view that knowledge is primarily gained through reason and logic rather than experience.

400

According to Hume, the two types of perception that form all knowledge are...

Impressions and ideas.

400

This type of ethical theory judges morality based on outcomes

Consequentialism.

400

According to Kant, this gives an action moral worth

Action from duty with a goodwill, not because of consequences or emotions

400

What would a virtue ethicist say about cheating on an exam?

It reflects a character flaw and prevents the person from developing moral virtue.

500

Which philosopher believed that social power affects who is believed and who is not?

Miranda Fricker

500

How does Fricker’s approach to epistemology differ from Plato, Descartes, and Hume?

She focuses on the social dimensions of knowledge, how power and identity shape who is heard or believed.

500

The difference between normative and metaethics

Normative ethics gives principles for moral action; metaethics examines the meaning and foundation of moral terms and claims.

500

These are two assumptions about ethics Held critiques

That reason is valued over emotion and that moral agents are independent rather than relational.

500

How might Held’s ethics of care challenge utilitarian or Kantian ethics?

By emphasizing relationships, empathy, and context instead of abstract rules or outcomes.