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Return to Great Conversation 8e Student Resources
Chapter 11 Self-Quiz
Quiz Content
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Epicurus thinks an important key to happiness lies in natural science because
it leads to technological breakthroughs that enhance the quality of life.
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it can show us that some of our fears are unfounded.
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knowledge is something good in itself.
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we should aim to keep our wills in harmony with nature.
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Hedonism
recommends pursuing every pleasure, so as to maximize happiness in life.
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is a doctrine that disparages pleasure and recommends virtue as the key to happiness.
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is compatible with denying oneself many pleasures.
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has nothing to say about pain, fear, or sorrow.
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We do not need to fear the gods, Epicurus says, because
they are uninterested in us.
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gods are by nature loving and kind.
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there are no gods.
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when we are, death is not; and when death is, we are not.
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According to Epicurus, someone who thinks happiness is pleasure and the absence of pain will
be unjust to others, if it will increase pleasure for himself.
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indulge her every desire.
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be an untrustworthy friend.
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be content with having little.
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A Stoic
believes that our happiness or unhappiness is entirely within our own control.
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says "Grin and bear it," no matter how unhappy something makes you.
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cares for no one and nothing but his or her own freedom and happiness.
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prefers nothing, shuns nothing, and is indifferent to everything.
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When Stoics advise us to keep our wills in harmony with nature, they
mean that if something feels natural to us, we should "go with the flow"and "just do it!"
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deny God.
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contradict Plato and Aristotle, who emphasize living in accord with reason.
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are in effect advising us to do our duty.
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A Stoic thinks we should
seek virtue more than happiness.
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never seek pleasure as an end.
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always be virtuous, because virtue produces the greatest pleasure.
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be skeptical of all claims to know what virtue is.
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A skeptic will
assert that nothing can be known.
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assert that we can know only the contents of our own minds.
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suspend judgment about what reality is like.
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refuse to ask why.
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With respect to the question, "Does a criterion of truth exist?" the skeptic
asserts with Xenophanes of Colophon that it does not.
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claims that an infinite regress is the only criterion available.
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engages in circular reasoning to prove the existence of a criterion.
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suspends judgment.
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Happiness, says the skeptic,
is unavailable to humans, since knowledge is unavailable.
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must be founded on sure and certain understanding of the true nature of reality.
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is available only to those who have gone through the pangs of skeptical doubt and come out into the clear light of knowledge on the other side.
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is a by-product of giving up the demand to know.
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