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A) Naturalism B) Non-naturalism C) Supernaturalism D) Anti-realism E) Dialectical Materialism F) Common Sense Realism G) Faith and Reason

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A) Naturalism B) Non-naturalism C) Supernaturalism D) Anti-realism E) Dialectical Materialism F) Common Sense Realism G) Faith and Reason H) Deconstruction _____Christianity

C) Supernaturalism and G) Faith and Reason

A) Naturalism B) Non-naturalism C) Supernaturalism D) Anti-realism E) Dialectical Materialism F) Common Sense Realism G) Faith and Reason H) Deconstruction _____Islam

C) Supernaturalism and G) Faith and Reason

A) Naturalism B) Non-naturalism C) Supernaturalism D) Anti-realism E) Dialectical Materialism F) Common Sense Realism G) Faith and Reason H) Deconstruction _____Secular Humanism

A) Naturalism

A) Naturalism B) Non-naturalism C) Supernaturalism D) Anti-realism E) Dialectical Materialism F) Common Sense Realism G) Faith and Reason H) Deconstruction _____Marxism-Leninism

E) Dialectical Materialism

A) Naturalism B) Non-naturalism C) Supernaturalism D) Anti-realism E) Dialectical Materialism F) Common Sense Realism G) Faith and Reason H) Deconstruction _____Cosmic Humanism

B) Non-naturalism

A) Naturalism B) Non-naturalism C) Supernaturalism D) Anti-realism E) Dialectical Materialism F) Common Sense Realism G) Faith and Reason H) Deconstruction _____Postmodernism

D) Anti-realism and H) Deconstruction

________________is the study of the structure, origin, and design of the universe

Cosmology is the study of the structure, origin, and design of the universe

______________is the belief that there is a “real world” independent of human subjects

Realism is the belief that there is a “real world” independent of human subjects

_________________is the study of knowledge

Epistemology is the study of knowledge

_________________is the study of ultimate reality

Metaphysics is the study of ultimate reality

_______________________is the study of the relationship of the mind (e.g. mental events, mental functions, mental properties, and consciousness) to the physical body

Mind/Body Problem is the study of the relationship of the mind (e.g. mental events, mental functions, mental properties, and consciousness) to the physical body

_______________is the study of existence and being

Ontology is the study of existence and being

____________________A means of textual criticism that considers a text open to interpretation and laden with hidden bias, assumptions, and prejudices

Deconstruction A means of textual criticism that considers a text open to interpretation and laden with hidden bias, assumptions, and prejudices

How does the naturalist’s “monistic” view of the mind and body differ from the Christian’s “dualistic” view?

For the naturalist, mind is merely the product of _______ and evolution. For the Christian, the mind existed ______ matter and brought matter into existence. Christianity views the mind dualistically— as both _______(the brain) and ________(the soul).

For the naturalist, mind is merely the product of matter and evolution. For the Christian, the mind existed ______ matter and brought matter into existence. Christianity views the mind dualistically— as both _______(the brain) and ________(the soul).

For the naturalist, mind is merely the product of matter and evolution. For the Christian, the mind existed before matter and brought matter into existence. Christianity views the mind dualistically— as both _______(the brain) and ________(the soul).

For the naturalist, mind is merely the product of matter and evolution. For the Christian, the mind existed before matter and brought matter into existence. Christianity views the mind dualistically— as both physical (the brain) and ________(the soul).

For the naturalist, mind is merely the product of matter and evolution. For the Christian, the mind existed before matter and brought matter into existence. Christianity views the mind dualistically— as both physical (the brain) and spiritual (the soul).

First, a monistic view of the mind implies that mankind is not immortal and that there is nothing supernatural in our makeup that survives death (no life after death).

Second, this viewpoint implies that we should not put confidence in the reasoning powers of a brain produced by evolution, since a “better _________ of mind could occur any day.”

First, a monistic view of the mind implies that mankind is not immortal and that there is nothing supernatural in our makeup that survives death (no life after death).

Second, this viewpoint implies that we should not put confidence in the reasoning powers of a brain produced by evolution, since a “better mutation of mind could occur any day.”

What is the Marxist dialectic and how does it work?

The Marxist dialectic is the view that life is a constantly evolving process resulting from the clash of opposing forces:• Every established idea (______) is eventually opposed by another idea (________).• Eventually, an entirely new entity will emerge from this opposition (________), which renders both thesis and antithesis obsolete.• This synthesis eventually becomes a thesis that is opposed by an antithesis . . . and so forth without end.

The result of this philosophical view is that reality is constantly __________—nothing is ever _______.

The Marxist dialectic is the view that life is a constantly evolving process resulting from the clash of opposing forces:• Every established idea (thesis) is eventually opposed by another idea (________).• Eventually, an entirely new entity will emerge from this opposition (________), which renders both thesis and antithesis obsolete.• This synthesis eventually becomes a thesis that is opposed by an antithesis . . . and so forth without end.

The result of this philosophical view is that reality is constantly __________—nothing is ever _______.

The Marxist dialectic is the view that life is a constantly evolving process resulting from the clash of opposing forces:• Every established idea (thesis) is eventually opposed by another idea (________).• Eventually, an entirely new entity will emerge from this opposition (________), which renders both thesis and antithesis obsolete.• This synthesis eventually becomes a thesis that is opposed by an antithesis . . . and so forth without end.

The result of this philosophical view is that reality is constantly __________—nothing is ever _______.

The Marxist dialectic is the view that life is a constantly evolving process resulting from the clash of opposing forces:• Every established idea (thesis) is eventually opposed by another idea (antithesis).• Eventually, an entirely new entity will emerge from this opposition (________), which renders both thesis and antithesis obsolete.• This synthesis eventually becomes a thesis that is opposed by an antithesis . . . and so forth without end.

The result of this philosophical view is that reality is constantly __________—nothing is ever _______.

The Marxist dialectic is the view that life is a constantly evolving process resulting from the clash of opposing forces:• Every established idea (thesis) is eventually opposed by another idea (antithesis).• Eventually, an entirely new entity will emerge from this opposition (synthesis), which renders both thesis and antithesis obsolete.• This synthesis eventually becomes a thesis that is opposed by an antithesis . . . and so forth without end.

The result of this philosophical view is that reality is constantly __________—nothing is ever _______.

The Marxist dialectic is the view that life is a constantly evolving process resulting from the clash of opposing forces:• Every established idea (thesis) is eventually opposed by another idea (antithesis).• Eventually, an entirely new entity will emerge from this opposition (synthesis), which renders both thesis and antithesis obsolete.• This synthesis eventually becomes a thesis that is opposed by an antithesis . . . and so forth without end.

The result of this philosophical view is that reality is constantly changing—nothing is ever _______.

The Marxist dialectic is the view that life is a constantly evolving process resulting from the clash of opposing forces:• Every established idea (thesis) is eventually opposed by another idea (antithesis).• Eventually, an entirely new entity will emerge from this opposition (synthesis), which renders both thesis and antithesis obsolete.• This synthesis eventually becomes a thesis that is opposed by an antithesis . . . and so forth without end.

The result of this philosophical view is that reality is constantly changing—nothing is ever certain.