Mind And Body Exam Questions Chapter 4 - Download Test Bank | Introducing Philosophy 12e Solomon by Robert C. Solomon. DOCX document preview.
Chapter 4: Mind and Body
Test Bank
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 1
1. The connectionist claims that the mechanical and physical interactions that occur in the brain determine the types of behavior that computers are capable of processing.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 2
2. Descartes said there were two types of substances: mind or mental substance and body or physical substance.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 3
3. Ryle believed that it was a mistake to think that “the mind” and its events were some strange and mysteriously private sort of thing behind our behavior when, in fact, the mind was the pattern of our behavior and not “behind” behavior at all.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 4
4. J. J. C. Smart argued that the identity theory was false because it was incompatible with modern science.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 5
5. Freud claimed that everything mental was knowable and therefore that surely everything “in the mind” could be described incorrigibly.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 6
6. Thomas Nagel argued that it was consciousness that made the mind–body problem so “intractable.”
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 7
7. Functionalism is the view that minds are produced by the relations between parts not particular kinds of material.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 8
8. Merleau-Ponty believed that there should be a sharp distinction between mind and body.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 9
9. Philosophers refer to the ability of knowing one's own mind by simply paying attention as Privileged access.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 10
10. Freud’s concept of the unconscious considers all thoughts that we are aware of at the moment and know everything about.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 11
11. Strong behaviorists believe that there are no mental events.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 12
12. Epiphenomenalism does not allow for causal interaction.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 13
13. The “official doctrine,” hailing from Descartes, states that everyone has a body and a mind and that at the death of the body the mind (soul) continues to exist.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 14
14. According to Ryle, attributing a mental property to someone is logically equivalent to saying that the person will act in a certain way.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 15
15. Philosophers of the mind and neuroscientists now understand the function of sleep.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 16
16. According to eliminative materialists, our increasing knowledge of the workings of the brain will outmode our “folk-psychology” talk about the mind and we will all learn to talk the language of neurology instead.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 17
17. Nagel pointed out that if we try to imagine what it is like to be a bat, the best we can do is imagine what it is like for us to be bats (which isn’t the question).
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 18
18. Husserl described consciousness as a kind of container in which one finds ideas, thoughts, feelings, desires, and so forth.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 19
19. Schopenhauer was thought to have refuted the “picture theory of thinking” in 1819.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 4 Question 20
20. The “Chinese Room” is a thought experiment designed by John Searle to show that a mind is not like a computer because, although both minds and computers manipulate formal symbols, only minds are capable of understanding what the symbols mean.
a. True
b. False
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 1
1. Behaviorism is the idea that __________.
a. all of our mental acts are knowable
b. our mental acts determine our behavior
c. only what is observable can be used as evidence in research regarding humans
d. the mind and body causally interact
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 2
2. The key to Ryle’s analysis is __________.
a. disposition
b. dualism
c. functionalism
d. identity theory
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 3
3. Descartes was a __________.
a. Devout buhddist
b. monist
c. dualist
d. pragmatist
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 4
4. The quote below belongs to__________ .
“Since brains do produce minds, and since programs by themselves can’t produce minds, it follows that the way the brain does it can’t be by simply instantiating a computer program.”
a. Gilbert Ryle
b. Rene Descartes
c. John Searle
d. Paul M. Churchland
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 5
5. If you believe that Data, the android on the TV show Star Trek, is sentient and conscious, even though his “brain” is made out of silicon and metal, then you would be a(n) __________.
a. eliminative materialist
b. identity theorist
c. functionalist
d. dualist
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 6
6. Incorrigibility is the term philosophers, especially Descartes, have given to __________.
a. persistent afterimages
b. the immediate certainty of our own conscious experiences
c. the arbitrary nature of intentional objects
d. dogmatic beliefs
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 7
7. How did Freud’s concept of the “unconscious” raise doubts about Descartes’s claim that whatever is mental can be described as incorrigible?
a. By suggesting that our ideas may not correspond to reality.
b. By suggesting that only our unconscious ideas are clear and distinct.
c. By suggesting that there are ideas in our minds that we don’t, and cannot, know.
d. By suggesting that no one is truly conscious and, therefore, that no mental activity can be said to be incorrigible.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 8
8. Intentionality may be defined as __________.
a. volition
b. temporality
c. privileged access
d. aboutness
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 9
9. Elizabeth V. Spelman uses __________ hierarchical account of the relationship between mind and body to illustrate how the problem of mind and body can impact other philosophical views.
a. Plato’s
b. Aristotle’s
c. Descartes’s
d. Hume’s
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 10
10. When Aristotle wrote about the soul, he was referring to __________.
a. the unconscious mind
b. the form of the body
c. the spirit within the body
d. the bottom of the feet
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 11
11. According to Galen Strawson, consciousness consists of two elements, __________.
a. the ego and the id
b. awareness and attention
c. sensations and intentionality
d. primary consciousness and subconsciousness
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 12
12. __________ warns us not to slide form distinguishing between mind and body to formulating dubious views about the inferiority of some groups of people relative to others.
a. Galen Strawson
b. Elizabeth V. Spelman
c. David Braddon-Mitchell
d. Frank Jackson
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 13
13. The notion that a mind can be instantiated in anything that functions like a brain is called __________.
a. multiple realizability
b. intentionality
c. incorrigibility
d. the dual aspect theory
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 14
14. According to Ryle, it is a necessary feature of whatever has physical existence that it is in __________.
a. space but not necessarily time
b. time but not necessarily space
c. neither space nor time
d. space and time
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 15
15. Husserl’s conception of consciousness depends on __________.
a. intentionality
b. incorrigibility
c. dual aspect theory
d. multiple realizability
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 16
16. __________ claimed that our experiences and ideas were one aspect of some events or activities of which the various chemical reactions of the brain were another aspect. This theory has often been called the dual aspect theory.
a. Descartes
b. Leibniz
c. Husserl
d. Russell
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 17
17. __________ offered the solution that there was no mind–body interaction and that monads were not physical. God programmed us so that our mental activities and our so-called bodily activities were exactly coordinated. This is called parallelism.
a. Descartes
b. Leibniz
c. Husserl
d. Russell
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 18
18. __________ claimed that his various fleeting thoughts could not be unified into a coherent, enduring self without the intervention of a higher power.
a. Descartes
b. Leibniz
c. Husserl
d. Russell
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 19
19. __________ believed that belief in consciousness went back to the ancient days of superstition and magic.
a. John Watson
b. Gilbert Ryle
c. Galen Strawson
d. Bertrand Russell
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 20
20. Nagel claims that the fact that an organism has conscious experience at all means that there is something it is like to __________ that organism.
a. know
b. be
c. fear
d. understand
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 21
21. Descartes’s account of mental changes causing bodily changes, and vice versa is called __________.
a. parallelism
b. functionalism
c. causal interactionism
d. epiphenomenalism
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 22
22. Behaviorism __________.
a. embraces dualism
b. rejects dualism
c. provisionally accepts dualism
d. is another way to talk about dualism
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 23
23. Ryle discussed __________, which generally means to mistake one type of thing for another.
a. concept mistake
b. metaphysical mistake
c. epistemological mistake
d. category mistake
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 24
24. According to Ryle, a(n) __________ is a tendency for something to happen given certain conditions.
a. attitude
b. disposition
c. behavior
d. determination
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 25
25. __________ argued that because the two languages that we could use to describe mental-neurological events were so different, the thing(s) that they referred to must be different as well.
a. Gilbert Ryle
b. Paul Churchland
c. Jerome Shaffer
d. J. J. C. Smart
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 26
26. __________ argues that, sensations are nothing over and above brain processes.
a. Gilbert Ryle
b. Paul Churchland
c. Jerome Shaffer
d. J.J.C. Smart
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 27
27. __________ believed that with our increasing knowledge of neurology, our ordinary language about human behavior would be seriously revised.
a. Gilbert Ryle
b. Paul Churchland
c. Jerome Shaffer
d. J.J.C. Smart
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 28
28. The __________ are materialists but they are not reductionists; they believe that consciousness is a result of the complicated connections that go on in the brain.
a. connectionist
b. functionalist
c. behaviorist
d. eliminative materialist
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 29
29. __________ had a view similar to those of Merleau-Ponty and Husserl, he argued for what he called "cognitive experience."
a. John Watson
b. Gilbert Ryle
c. Galen Strawson
d. Bertrand Russell
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 30
30. David Chalmers has made use of the notion of __________ to challenge physicalist views of the mind.
a. dualism
b. infinity
c. matter
d. zombies
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 1
1. The dual aspect theory seems similar to Merleau-Ponty’s notion of a unified body. What are the differences and similarities in these views? Could these theories be combined in an interesting way? Why or why not? Where does the identity theory fit in? How does it compare with the other two accounts?
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 2
2. The argument for functionalism is ultimately concerned with the relations between elements of the brain; mental acts occur as a “function” of elements. Logical behaviorism claims that the mind is only the “pattern” of our behavior. What is different between these two accounts? What is similar about these accounts? In what ways are they using the same ideas to provide different accounts of the mind?
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 3
3. Can an adequate behaviorist account of a nonhuman animal’s consciousness be given? A sparrow’s? A dog’s? A chimpanzee’s? If behaviorism fits some of these cases and not others, how would you separate them?
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 4
4. Write your account of a debate between Ryle and Nagel on the question of the nature of consciousness. Who do you side with, and why?
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 5
5. Explain Husserl’s concept of intentionality. Does this solve the mind–body problem? If so, how? If not, why not?
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 6
6. Why do you suppose it was much easier for Descartes to prove the existence of his own mind than anyone else’s? Why was Descartes’s proof of his own mental existence foundational? How did he eventually argue for the existence of other minds?
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 7
7. Differentiate between two senses in which an occurrence was said to be explained, according to Ryle. For instance: Why did the glass break? One explanation is “because a stone hit it,” and another is “because it is brittle.” Which explanation is causal, and which is expressing an underlying law like proposition? How did Ryle apply this concept of “different senses of an explanation” to the concept of “disposition” in his analysis of the mind?
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 8
8. Differentiate between the two senses of the meaning of “identity,” that is, empirical identity could be discovered through observation, experimentation, and experience, whereas logical identity is about synonymous terminology.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 9
9. Why do eliminative materialists believe that a smooth intertheoretic reduction between folk psychology and neurobiology is not possible? They don’t think that mental states, such as thoughts, desires, fears, beliefs, and so forth, match up in a one-to-one correspondence to brain states (i.e., particular patterns of neuronal firings). Paul Churchland, for one, was convinced that folk-psychological terms were not simply incomplete representations of our inner states but rather that they were misrepresentations, in the way phlogiston was. Use the phlogiston example to argue the eliminative materialist’s case that the poverty of our current conceptual framework will be overhauled with the advancement of neuroscience.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 4 Question 10
10. In which sense do identity theorists such as J. J. C. Smart and their critics such as Jerome Shaffer mean that “thought” and “brain process” are or are not, identical? Hint: Is it correct to say that the terms water and H2O are synonyms, or do water and H2O have different properties (e.g., water is wet, but an H2O molecule is not wet) and do not, therefore, have the same meaning?
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 4 Question 1
1. Merleau-Ponty attacked __________ from the side that has so far seemed least controversial, the idea that the human body is just another “bit of matter.”
a. dualism
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 4 Question 2
2. __________ is the “immediate” certainty that you feel in the case of your own conscious experience.
a. Incorrigibility
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 4 Question 3
3. __________ complained that __________ started with behavior, either human behavior or computer behavior, and claimed that understanding human consciousness was just a matter of finding the right “program” for that behavior.
a. Connectionists, functionalists
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 4 Question 4
4. Shaffer argues that no amount of research could possibly show that __________ and __________ have the same properties.
a. brain processes, thought
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 4 Question 5
5. The __________ denied dualism by insisting that mental terms referred to a neurological process that scientists someday would be able to specify precisely.
a. identity theory
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 4 Question 6
6. __________ proposed to defend materialism without claiming an identity between what we call “mental states” and the workings of the brain.
a. Eliminative materialism
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 4 Question 7
7. __________, in all forms, becomes nonsense in one’s own case when one is trying to understand and talk about one’s own mental states.
a. Behaviorism
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 4 Question 8
8. __________ believed that with our increasing knowledge of neurology, our ordinary language would be seriously revised.
a. Paul Churchland
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 4 Question 9
9. In reference to the “contents” of consciousness philosopher William James developed this popular phrase, __________.
a. stream of consciousness
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 4 Question 10
10. For __________, mental events and physical events were different aspects of the same “something,” in his case, the same substance.
a. Spinoza
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Download Test Bank | Introducing Philosophy 12e Solomon
By Robert C. Solomon