※ 引述《joseph68 (再ㄧ次)》之銘言:
: ※ [本文轉錄自 NTU-Exam 看板]
: 作者: phage17 (龍族 ) 看板: NTU-Exam
: 標題: [試題] 94下 苑舉正 哲學概論第一次小考
: 時間: Thu Apr 6 17:17:27 2006
: 課程名稱︰哲學概論
: 課程性質︰必修
: 課程教師︰苑舉正
: 開課系所︰牙醫系
: 考試時間︰30分鐘
: 試題 :
: 1.Our word for "philosophy" comes from a Greek expression meaning:
: A. wise fool
: B. search for wisdom
: C. love of wisdom
: D. examined life
: E. self-examination
(C)
: 2.In Socrates' view, true happiness:
: A. is impossible in life, but may be achieved in the afterlife
: B. is, sadly, incompatible with the practice of philosophy
: C. can only be achieved in a democracy
: D. lies in having the wisdom to accept one's fate without question
: E. may be achieved through a process of delf-examination
(E)
: 3.According to Socrates:
: A. the principles of right thought and action vary from society to society
: B. the principles of right thought and action vary from generation to
: generation
: C. the principles of right thought and action are the same for all people at
: all times
: D. there are no universal principles of thought and action and each of us is
: an individual
: E. if there are universally valid principles of thought and action, it is
: impossible for mortals to know what they are
(C)
: 4.Socrates believes the role of a teacher is:
: A. to pass on the truth to students
: B. to ask probing questions
: C. to demonstrate the true principle of thought and action
: D. to dicover students' strengths and weaknesses
: E. all of the above
(B)
: 5.Socrates was the first philosopher:
: A. to study cosmology
: B. to write a dialogue
: C. to found a school
: D. in the western tradition
: E. to develop the idea that there is a parallel between language an the
: world
(E)
: 6.The ancient Milesian philosophers were primarily concerned with:
: A. the study of the nature of man
: B. the pursuit of "the good life"
: C. the nature of ethical behavior
: D. learning the order and composition of the universe
: E. the relationship between man and the gods
(D)
: 7.One of the Thaless' philosophical positions was that:
: A. everything is made of fire
: B. everything is made of water
: C. everything is made of air
: D. everything is made of earth
: E. everything is made of energy
(B)
: 8.Logos, according to the Stoics, is:
: A. the power of words
: B. the rational part of the soul
: C. the rational power that organizes the universe
: D. an ethical principle
: E. an ideal state we may reach only through the study of philosophy
(C)
: 9.The philosophical notion of "natural law" has its origins in:
: A. the atomist ideas of Lucretius
: B. Anaximander's cosmological theories
: C. the Socratic Dialogues
: D. Christian theological writings
: E. the Stoic doctrine
(E)
: 10.According to empiricism:
: A. all knowledge is gained by the exercise of reason
: B. all knowledge is obtained through the senses
: C. we are born with innate knowledge
: D. sensory perceptions cannot be trusted
: E. learning is really a process of remembering what we already know
(B)
: 11.The philosopher usually cited as the originator of the new theory of
: knowledge is:
: A. Hume
: B. Kant
: C. Descartes
: D. Leibniz
: E. Rousseau
(C)
: 12.Which of the following was not one of Descartes' rules for conducting an
: inquiry?
: A. Difficult problems should be divided into as many parts as possible
: B. Review your reasoning to make sure nothing has been omitted
: C. Reasoning should proceed from simple concepts to complicated ones
: D. Ensure that your subject is a philosophical or mathematical matter,
: rather than a religious or poetic one
: E. Accept nothing as true that you do not clearly recognize as being so
(D)
: 13.Descartes' most important contribution to philosophy was:
: A. his analysis of dreams
: B. his rejection of received opinion
: C. his work in analytic geometry
: D. his method of examining problems
: E. his ability to make daring inferences
(D)
: 14.Descartes' method is:
: A. both a method of doubt and a method of inquiry
: B. a nethod of discovery
: C. both a method of discovery and a method of verification
: D. a way of setting forth one's knowledge in a systematic way
: E. a way to prove with certainty things one already knows
(A)
: 15.The basic indubitable truth upon which Descartes sought to found all his
: knowledge was that:
: A. he, himself, exists
: B. an all-powerful God exists
: C. mathematical truths cannot be doubted
: D. the facts of experience cannot be doubted
: E. the senses do not lie
(A)
: 16.Epistemological skepticism is the view that:
: A. what's true for you may not be true for someone else
: B. the "epistemological turn" was a mistake
: C. we should study what we know, not how we know
: D. we can never adequately justify any of our beliefs
: E. we can never know more than basic facts, such as that the physical world
: exists
(D)
: 17.Descartes raises the possibility of the existence of an "evil genius" in
: order to demonstrate that:
: A. a non-deceiving God exists
: B. he might be deceived even when he reasons that 2+3=5, or that square has
: four sides
: C. he can infer his existence from the fact that he is thinking
: D. not every "genius" is morally good
: E. beliefs obtained from the senses are uncertain
(B)
: 18.Solipsism is the belief that:
: A. nothing exists
: B. no belief can ever be adequately justified
: C. I exist, but nothing else can be proven to exist
: D. beliefs gained through the senses cannot be justified
: E. none of the above
(C)
: 19.Which of the following are rationalists?
: A. David Hume
: B. G.W. Leibniz
: C. Rene Descartes
: D. both B and C
: E. all of the above
(D)
: 20.The idea that the mind enters the world as a tabula rasa was first put
: forward by:
: A. the empiricist John Locke
: B. the rationalist Rene Descartes
: C. Plaot
: D. modem psychologists, such as Sigmund Freud
: E. none of the above
(A)
: Answers:
: 1.C 2.E 3.C 4.B 5.E 6.D 7.B 8.C 9.E 10.B
: 11.C 12.D 13.D 14.A 15.A 16.D 17.B 18.C 19.D 20.A
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