Phil 1010, Practice Final Exam George Rainbolt s Section, Fall 2008



Similar documents
Farzad Family Law Scholarship 2014

IN RE MARRIAGE CASES (California): 2008

How To Pass The Same Sex Marriage Act

CHURCH INSURANCE. Religious Expression and Your Church. A Practical Guide to Protect Your Ministry

Same-Sex Marriage: Breeding Ground for Logical Fallacies

Gay Marriage. but it is hard to make a decision whether gay marriage should be legal. There are

Release #2301 Release Date and Time: 6:00 a.m., Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Position Paper on Adoption Law Reform

Shifting Sensibilities: Attitudes toward Same-sex Marriage, Past, Present and Future

Playing God? Part One: The Ethics of Genetic Manipulation

Same-Sex Marriage and the Argument from Public Disagreement

MARRIAGE vs. REGISTERED PARTNERSHIP: FULL EQUALITY OR SEGREGATION FOR SAME-SEX COUPLES?

Lecture 2: Moral Reasoning & Evaluating Ethical Theories

Evolutionary Attitudes Survey Hawley & Parkinson, 2008 (Pilot N = 90, Intro Psych Subject Pool) University of Kansas

INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC

Hypothetical Syllogisms 1

Understanding Diversity of Definitions for Gender for the Public Debate

CHILD PLACING AGENCY RELIG. CONFLICT H.B (H-2), 4189, & 4190: ANALYSIS AS REPORTED FROM COMMITTEE

2. Argument Structure & Standardization

Anti-Gay vs. Pro-Marriage. Anonymous. The American dream, one of freedom and equality, is cherished in the heart of every

LGBT Adoptions in the US & South Africa Samantha Moore

Goodridge, et al. v. Department of Public Health, State of Massachusetts 440 Mass. 309 (2003) (Abridged by Instructor)

Developing Critical Thinking Skills with The Colbert Report

Kant s deontological ethics

Getting It Straight What the Research Shows about Homosexuality. Peter Sprigg and Timothy Dailey, Co-Editors

A. The Three Main Branches of the Philosophical Study of Ethics. 1. Meta-ethics. 2. Normative Ethics. 3. Applied Ethics

Opinion Poll. Missouri Small Businesses Support Workplace Nondiscrimination Policies. June 4, 2013

Working with Youth to Develop Critical Thinking Skills On Sexual Violence and Dating Violence: Three Suggested Classroom Activities

Defining Marriage in California: An Analysis of Public & Technical Argument

EQUAL CIVIL MARRIAGE: A CONSULTATION RESPONSE

A. Arguments are made up of statements, which can be either true or false. Which of the following are statements?

Philosophy 1100: Introduction to Ethics Exercise 2: Morality and the Bible

Social Exchange Theory Applied to Romantic. Relationships

COLORADO, IOWA, VIRGINIA VOTERS BACK POPE ON CLIMATE, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY SWING STATE POLL FINDS; VOTERS SAY LEAVE SAME-SEX MARRIAGE ALONE

Hume on identity over time and persons

Table of Contents. Executive Summary 1

2015 STATE OF THE FIRST AMENDMENT SURVEY A Project Sponsored by the Newseum Institute

def: An axiom is a statement that is assumed to be true, or in the case of a mathematical system, is used to specify the system.

Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis Ethical Aspects. Sonya Al-Mohammed, MBBS, Arab Board, MSc*

Social & Political Philosophy. Karl Marx ( ) Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844

Am I An Atheist Or An Agnostic?

1.2 Forms and Validity

Homily for 4 th Sunday Easter, UW Newman,

The Conservative Case for Gay Marriage

A GUIDE TO SCREENING AND SELECTION IN EMPLOYMENT.

Philosophy 1100: Introduction to Ethics

Study questions Give a short answer to the following questions:

Development of a computer system to support knowledge acquisition of basic logical forms using fairy tale "Alice in Wonderland"

MARRIAGE, FAMILY AND DIVORCE A Social Document of the ULCA

Try and list resentments in groups, i.e.; Family, school, relationships, work, etc.

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF OREGON EUGENE DIVISION

Chapter 2. Sociological Investigation

OVERVIEW OF THE EQUALITY ACT 2010

In Support of Equal Marriage Rights for All [Adopted at the Twenty-fifth General Synod of the United Church of Christ on July 4, 2005]

Handout #1: Introduction to Bioethics

Moral Issues and Catholic Values: The California Vote in 2008 Proposition 8

This is a publication of the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs. FAQ Same-sex marriage 2010

Universal Declaration of Human Rights

CRITICAL THINKING. Induction v Deduction. Enumerative Induction and Inductive Generalization Sample Size Representativeness Mean, Median, Mode,

Archdiocese of Santa Fe s Annual Red Mass By Archbishop Emeritus Joseph A. Fiorenza, Galveston-Houston, Homilist

Question & Answer Guide On California s Parental Opt-Out Statutes:

Civil Rights and Ending Discrimination

MOVING MARRIAGE FORWARD BUILDING MAJORITY SUPPORT FOR MARRIAGE

Fundamental Principles of American Democracy

Program Level Learning Outcomes for the Department of Philosophy Page 1

Physician assisted suicide and euthanasia: dangerous and unnecessary

CONCERNING CHRISTIANS' CIVIC DUTY

How To Learn Sociology

What Is the Narcotics Anonymous Program?

The Toulmin Model: A tool for diagramming informal arguments. by Sergei Naumoff

Case 2:13-cv RJS Document 16 Filed 08/12/13 Page 1 of 14

The ties that bind: same-sex parent families in a modern world

Human Rights. 1. All governments must respect the human rights of all persons.

Role of husbands and wives in Ephesians 5

Stephen G. Post (ed.), Encyclopedia of Bioethics, 3rd ed. (New York: Macmillan Reference, 2004), Vol. 3, p. 1412

Beyond: A Response to Richard Norris

Tool for Attorneys Working with Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) Survivors of Domestic Violence

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

A-LEVEL RELIGIOUS STUDIES

Marriage. Marital status continues to change. Marriage rate has declined since 1950 Birth rate has declined since 1950

Wisconsin Survey Spring 2012

Philosophy 3: Critical Thinking University of California, Santa Barbara Fall 2011

The Westminster Faith Debates 2013: Religion in Personal Life

Common Goals of the First European TransGender Council

Last time we had arrived at the following provisional interpretation of Aquinas second way:

College of Agriculture, School of Human Environmental Sciences

Unit 14: The Question of Causation

Transcription:

Phil 1010, Practice Final Exam George Rainbolt s Section, Fall 2008 I. Statement Types: for each of the following statements, identify its type. If a statement contains two or more types, choose the type best represented by the main connector. Choose from the options given below. A. Simple Statement B. Negation C. Conjunction D. Disjunction E. Conditional F. None of the above. 1. Bert and Ernie are characters on a popular children's television show. 2. Bert and Ernie live together. 3. If you don't eat your meat, you can't have any pudding! 4. Every time you cheat on a test, God kills a kitten. 5. There are no unicorns, unless you count the ones in my back garden. 6. Don t eat that! II. Propositional Arguments: identify the forms of the following arguments. 6. If there is no God, then everything is permissible. But not everything is permissible, so there is a God. A. Affirming the Antecedent B. Disjunctive Syllogism C. Denying the Consequent D. Tri-Conditional 1

7. Capitalist economies will fall to the communist revolution unless the accumulation of capital is perpetually outstripped by wage increases. However, in capitalist economies this will not happen because wages will decrease as capital is accumulated. Hence, capitalism is doomed. A. Tri-Conditional B. Affirming the Consequent. C. Denying the Antecedent D. Disjunctive Syllogism 8. If Brenda Brucker is elected senator, Nazis will ride dinosaurs through the streets and rivers will run red with blood. Fortunately, she was not elected, and therefore we will not see either blood-tinged rivers or dinosaur-riding Nazis. A. Disjunctive Syllogism B. Denying the Antecedent C. Affirming the Antecedent (also called Modus Ponens) D. Denying the Consequent (also called Modus Tollens) 9. Eating meat or other factory-farm food products is sufficient for contributing to the pain and suffering of millions of animals. Furthermore, if you contribute to that, you are behaving immorally. So if you eat meat or other factory-farm food products, you are behaving immorally. A. Tri-Conditional B. Disjunctive Syllogism C. Affirming the Antecedent (also called Modus Ponens) D. Affirming the Consequent 10. For the passage below, select the type of disjunction used. Assume that the argument has good form. Hera will turn Callisto into a bear unless Zeus stops trying to sleep with her. Since Callisto was turned into a bear, Zeus must not have stopped. A. Inclusive B. Exclusive C. None of the above. 2

III. Analogical Arguments Consider the following passage: "The Homosexual Conduct L aw interferes with more than specific sex acts - it strikes at gay relationships in a deeply harmful manner. For gay adults, as for heterosexual ones, sexual expression is integrally linked to forming and nurturing the close personal bonds that give humans the love, attachment, and intimacy they need to thrive" [and hence the Homosexual Conduct Law should be overturned as it unjustifiably deprives gay persons of many opportunities to flourish as their heterosexual peers do]. [from Lawrence v Texas, the 2003 Supreme Court case that overturned Texas' ban on same-sex sexual behavior, accessed 7.17.2008 from FindLaw for Legal Professionals: http://supreme.lp.findlaw.com/supreme_court/briefs/02-102/02-102.pet.pdf] 11. Identify the conclusory feature given in the argument above. A. The homosexual conduct law B. The need for love, attachment, etc. to thrive C. The moral right to thrive D. Sexual expression E. None of the abvoe. 12. Identify the analogue used in the argument above A. The Homosexual Conduct Law B. Heterosexual couples C. Gay Couples D. Sexual expression 13. What kind of analogical argument does the Supreme Court employ in the above passage? A. Non-Empirical - Equal Treatment B. Empirical - Temporal C. Non-Empirical - Logical D. Empirical - Environmental E. Empirical - Standard F. None of the above. 3

14. What is the primary subject of the analogical argument above? A. The Homosexual Conduct Law B. Heterosexual couples C. Gay Couples D. Sexual expression IV. Statistical Arguments Consider the following data, collected from a 2005 University of Michigan study concerning the acceptance of atheism by Americans. The data pertains to the percentage (rounded to the nearest whole number) of respondents who would approve of a marriage between an atheist and a member of their family (called an "intermarriage"). The survey had 2081 respondents. Intermarriage Attend Church? Religious? No Yes No Yes Approve 19 9 31 11 No Difference 59 30 59 37 Disapprove 23 61 11 52 [from Edgell et al., Atheists As Other : Moral Boundaries and Cultural Membership in American Society in American Sociological Review, 2006, VOL. 71 (April:211 234), 219] Suppose that one were to make the following argument: The UM study demonstrates that religiosity is a more polarizing factor than church attendance with respect to the private attitude that Americans have towards atheism. While religious persons were roughly five times as likely as their non-religious counterparts to disapprove of intermarriage, church attendees were approximately three times as likely to disapprove as non-attendees. 15. In the above argument, which of the following is the relevant property? A. Religiosity B. Disapproval of intermarriage C. Approval of intermarriage D. Polarization 4

16. In the above argument, what is the target? A. Americans B. Atheists C. The respondents to the survey D. Church attendees E. The non-religious F. None of the above. For the following questions, consult the chart below, concerning public acceptance of the theory of evolution as it pertains to humans. Nation Percent Who Accept Evolutionary Theory Iceland 86 France 62 Norway 75 Belgium 75 Turkey 28 United Kingdom 76 Switzerland 60 United States 40 [from Science Magazine, VOL 313 11 August 2006, accessed 7.17.2008 from http://richarddawkins.net/pdf/science_evolution_2006.pdf] 17. What is the mode of the data above? A. 64% B. 68.5% C. 64% D. 28% E. 75% F. None of the above. 18. What is the mean of the data above? A. 64% B. 68.5% C. 64% D. 28% E. 75% F. None of the above. 5

19. What is the median of the data above? A. 64% B. 68.5% C. 64% D. 28% E. 75% 20. Which of the following nations is the most likely candidate for being an outlier? A. Belgium B. Switzerland C. United States D. Turkey V. Causal Arguments 21. Which of the following errors or fallacies is NOT associated with causal arguments? A. Hasty Cause B. Slippery Slope C. Ad Hominem For the next questions, suppose a scientist wishes to determine whether or not a history of breast cancer is a cause of heart attacks in women over the age of 50. 22. Which of the following discoveries would, if true, support such a finding? A. Breast cancer is more common in women above the age of 50 than women below the age of 50. B. Heart attacks are equally likely to affect women with breast cancer as those without it. C. More women over 50 who experienced breast cancer at some point in their lives have heart attacks than women who did not ever experience breast cancer. D. Women over 50 are equally likely to experience breast cancer as they are a heart attack. 6

23. Which of the following discoveries would, if true, count as strong evidence against such a finding? A. Breast cancer and heart attacks are correlated for women over the age of 50. B. Breast cancer and heart attacks are correlated for women over the age of 50, and most of the women who experience both are smokers. C. Women over 50 are equally likely to experience breast cancer as they are a heart attack. D. There is no correlation between breast cancer and heart attacks in women under the age of 50. 24. Which of the following is the most complete reason why causal arguments are inductive? A. You can never rule out reverse causation. B. You can never rule out the possibility that the data you have are incorrect. C. Verification of a correlation between E1 and E2 can never establish conclusively the lack of correlation between some E3 and the other two events. D. Scientists, who frequently make causal arguments, are willing to say anything to get grant money. VI. Moral Arguments Timothy J. Dailey of the Family Research Council argues that Once marriage is no longer confined to a man and a woman, and the sole criterion becomes the presence of "love" and "mutual commitment," it is impossible to exclude virtually any "relationship" between two or more partners of either sex. To those who scoff at concerns that gay marriage could lead to the acceptance of other harmful and widely-rejected sexual behaviors, it should be pointed out that until very recent times the very suggestion that two women or two men could "marry" would have been greeted with scorn. The movement to redefine marriage has already found full expression in what is variously called "polyfidelity" or "polyamory," which seeks to replace traditional marriage with a bewildering array of sexual combinations among various groups of individuals. [accessed 7.18.2008 from http://www.frc.org/content/ten-facts-about-same-sexmarriage] 7

25. What kind of moral argument is Dailey making? A. Aretaic B. Deontological C. Consequentialist D. None of the above. 26. Which action is being morally evaluated in the argument? A. The act of a man marrying a man or a woman marrying a woman B. The act of altering legal codes to recognize marriages between couples of the same sex C. The acts of polyamory or polyfidelity D. The act of discriminating against gay couples Suppose your instructor responded to such an argument as follows: Making a case against gay marriage that is grounded on an objection to any positive evaluation of an expanded variety of meaningful human relationships is both authoritarian in its political aspirations and morally stingy in its undertaking. It is in effect saying that the only valuable form of deep, long-lasting human relationship or romantic partnership or at least the only one valuable enough to receive social sanction is that which is possible between a man and a woman. When put in those terms, this argument is exposed for what it truly is: a naked attempt to suppress any values not shared by the arguer. An expansion in the types of romantic relationships that are seen as socially valuable provides more opportunities for individuals to develop positive, meaningful attachments to each other and as a result to acquire more valuable and excellent character traits an opportunity currently denied to gay and lesbian persons due to the state s failure to recognize gay marriage. 27. What kind of moral argument is your instructor making? A. Aretaic B. Deontological C. Consequentialist D. None of the above. 8

28. Which of the following is NOT a premise in the above argument? A. Allowing gay marriage would enable the development of various character traits. B. Character traits associated with forming and maintaining deep romantic relationships are valuable. C. Romantic relationships between persons of the same sex are potentially valuable. D. Romantic relationships between those of the same sex are more valuable than romantic relationships between those of the opposite sex. 29. Which of the following could NOT be a premise in an argument made by a noncognitivist? A. 63 percent of Americans find the television show Family Guy to be very entertaining. B. Black holes are the collapsed remnants of dead stars from which no matter can escape. C. It is good that women are allowed to vote. D. It frightens me that only two-fifths of the population believes in evolution. VII. Essays A. Evaluate the following definition by the rules for good definitions and the criteria for appropriate expertise. Be sure to identify (i) what word is being defined, (ii) what type and method of definition you are evaluating, (iii) who is offering the definition and (iv) why it breaks or meets each and every rule (do not simply state that it does or does not meet a rule, say why in each case). Thinking is not the [mental] reproduction of that which exists. As long as thinking is not interrupted, it has a firm grasp on possibility... beyond all specialized and particular content, thinking is actually and above all the force of resistance, alienated from resistance only with great effort. [from Theodor Adorno s Culture Industry, (New York: Routledge 2006), p. 202] 9

B. Standardize and evaluate the following argument, including any unstated premises or conclusions and any sub-arguments, and rephrasing as needed. If it is a linked argument, evaluate all sub-arguments as well. Be sure to include all aspects of evaluation, such as (i) whether the premises are dependent or independent, positively or negatively relevant or irrelevant to the conclusion and (iii) whether or not the argument would be stronger with sub-arguments that have not been provided. Also be sure to consider whether any key terms defined have been given good definitions and whether any fallacies have been committed. In addition provide the specific evaluation called for by the argument s specific type according to the list below; i.e. your standardization should be one of the five types (deductive, analogical, statistical, causal, moral). If the argument is deductive, (a) put the argument into proper standard form. (b) identify the elementary argument form of the argument. (c) evaluate using TP and GF tests. If the argument is analogical, (a) identify the type of analogy (b) put into the proper standard form of an analogical argument. (c) identify the primary subject, the analogue(s), the similarities, and the conclusory feature. (d) evaluate using the TP and GF tests. If the argument is statistical, (a) identify and evaluate the sampling technique; if no technique is given, suggest which technique would be best for finding the results needed by the argument and which techniques would prohibit the argument from passing GF test (b) put into the proper standard form of a statistical argument. (c) identify the sample, the target, the relevant property, the P%, and the N. (d) evaluate using the TP and GF tests If the argument is causal, (a) identify which type(s) of causal claim is/are made in the conclusion (necessary cause, sufficient cause, contributory cause, etc). (b) put the argument into the proper standard form of a causal argument, (c) evaluate using the TP and GF tests If the argument is moral, (a) standardize it in the proper form (b) identify exactly the specific type of moral claim the main argument is (c) evaluate it using the TP and GF tests 10

Because they both fall under the principle of freedom of conscience, both education and religion are analogous in all the morally relevant ways. For parents this means that they should have the freedom and authority to determine which sort of schooling their children get, just as they have the freedom and authority to determine which religious education their children get. This freedom should therefore disallow state intervention in educational practice, including subsidies drawn from taxes, compulsory attendance laws, and mandatory curriculum standards, just as it disallows religious subsidies drawn from taxes, compulsory church attendance, and state-prescribed religious ceremonies, rites or doctrines. Hence public schooling should be abolished on exactly the same grounds that state-enforced public religion, wherever it exists, should be abolished. [from James Otteson s Actual Ethics (New York: Cambridge 2006), pp. 205-206] 11