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Midterm Exam GEC 18

The midterm exam for GEC 18 will contain multiple choice and modified true or false questions. It will assess concepts from philosophy, including ideas from thinkers like Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, and Protagoras. Key philosophical terms that may be defined or explained include "logos", "ethos", "praxis", "philos", and "sophia".

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MELANIE ABALDE
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
223 views21 pages

Midterm Exam GEC 18

The midterm exam for GEC 18 will contain multiple choice and modified true or false questions. It will assess concepts from philosophy, including ideas from thinkers like Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, and Protagoras. Key philosophical terms that may be defined or explained include "logos", "ethos", "praxis", "philos", and "sophia".

Uploaded by

MELANIE ABALDE
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Midterm Exam GEC 18

Mixture of multiple choice and modified true or false

s.abalde.melanie@cmu.edu.ph Switch account

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He proposes that it is not enough to know the good but one has to do good. *

Protagoras

Gaucon

Socrates

Aristotle

Plato

The Greek word for ‘love’ or ‘friend’. *

"sophia"

"philos"

"logos"

"mos" or "moris"

"ethos"
He claimed that human person has the inexhaustible ability to always change for
the better. *

Socrates

Aristotle

Protagoras

Kant

Plato

The Greek word for the English term, ‘custom’. *

"logos"

"mos" or "moris"

"sophia"

"philos"

"ethos"

In the Allegory of the cave by Plato, what were thought by the prisoners in the
cave as the most real things. *

The wall of the cave

The fire

The sun

The cave itself

The shadows
The vice as an excess of the virtue of friendliness. *

bashfulness

Obsequiousness

boastfulness

irascibility

buffoonery

It implements your decisions and perfects your motives into reality. *

Character

The will

Moral courage

Reason

Prejudices

They provide initial reckoning of a situation but are not the sole basis for our
motives and actions. *

Rational capacity

The moral agent

Human acts

Personhood

Feelings
A branch of pure philosophy dealing with beauty and creation. *

Logic

Cosmology

Epistemology

Theodicy

Aesthetics

The deficiency of the virtue of courage. *

smallness of soul

paltriness

cowardice

meanness

insensibility

The mean between envy and malice. *

moderation

friendliness

courage

modesty

proper indignation
What makes the people most remembered? *

Personality or character

Ignorance

Function

Reason

Significant character traits

It is the process of forming a habit. *

'gawi'

'kagawian'

'gawa'

habituation

'goals'

The mean between self-indulgence and insensibility. *

friendliness

moderation

courage

modesty

proper indignation
A system of codes that gives the world meaning and shapes the behavior of
people. *

Culture

Human act

A-moral activity

The good

Act of man

It allows us to reckon reality with imaginative and calculative lenses. *

Feelings

Human acts

Rational capacity

Personhood

The moral agent

It is an approach or way of reckoning in different situations that one faces in


his/her life. *

Significant character traits

Ignorance

Personality or character

Reason

Function
The vice that is the excess of the virtue of truthfulness. *

boastfulness

irascibility

buffoonery

bashfulness

Obsequiousness

The virtue between bashfulness and shamelessness. *

proper indignation

friendliness

courage

moderation

modesty

For Plato, this is the sole reason why someone can commit immoral acts. *

Significant character traits

Personality or character

Ignorance of the good

Reason

Function
A branch of pure philosophy dealing on how to acquire pure knowledge. *

Epistemology

Theodicy

Aesthetics

Logic

Cosmology

It gives significance to the human action. *

Rational capacity

Personhood

Human acts

Feelings

The moral agent

What is the Filipino equivalent to the ‘praxis’ of Aristotle? *

'gawa'

habituation

'kagawian'

'gawi'

'goals'
It refers to a free action that is oriented toward a particular end. *

habituation

'goals'

'gawa'

'kagawian'

'gawi'

The first victim of a bad decision or a wrong action. *

Human acts

Personhood

Feelings

The moral agent

Rational capacity

The Geek word for ‘study’ or ‘reason’. *

"mos" or "moris"

"logos"

"ethos"

"philos"

"sophia"
The branch of philosophy dealing with the nature of human conduct. *

Ethics

Ontology

Metaphysics

Anthropology

Rational psychology

An action performed without knowledge, freedom and intention. *

Culture

Human act

A-moral activity

The good

Act of man

The Greek word for ‘wisdom’. *

"logos"

"philos"

"sophia"

"mos" or "moris"

"ethos"
Filipino equivalent to ethos in Greek and ‘mos’ or ‘moris’ in Latin. *

'gawi'

'kagawian'

habituation

'goals'

'gawa'

The deficiency as the extreme opposite of the excess that is prodigality. *

meanness

cowardice

smallness of soul

insensibility

paltriness

Particular actions that flow from the personhood of the human being. *

Feelings

Rational capacity

The moral agent

Human acts

Personhood
It refers to the kind of acts that people are used accomplishing. *

habituation

'kagawian'

'gawi'

'gawa'

'goals'

He claimed that "man is the measure of all things." *

Socrates

Protagoras

Plato

Aristotle

Kant

The philosopher who claimed that the good once it is seen and recognized by
any man, it is followed and lived even at the cost of one's life. *

Aristotle

Protagoras

Plato

Socrates

Gaucon
What is the literal translation of the Greek word ‘ergon’ *

Reason

Personality or character

Function

Ignorance of the good

Significant character traits

The deficiency of the mean that is magnificence. *

paltriness

smallness of soul

cowardice

insensibility

meanness

In the allegory of the cave by Plato, what represents the good? *

The shadows

The wall of the cave

The fire

The cave itself

The sun
The branch of philosophy dealing with man both body and soul. *

Ontology

Rational psychology

Anthropology

Metaphysics

Ethics

What is the conclusion of Glaucon about the story of the Gyges' ring? *

Man's ethical action is motivated by his religiousity.

The human person's ethical actions are the result of fear.

Man is basically evil.

Man's ethical action is a result of contemplation of the good.

Man is basically good.

Most of the time if not always they make our decisions partial. *

Character

Prejudices

The will

Reason

Moral courage
What radically distinguishes the human person from other forms of being. *

Significant character traits

Ignorance

Reason

Personality or character

Function

It is the result of morally developed will. *

The will

Prejudices

Moral courage

Character

Reason

It tempers the feelings when one is making a moral decision or choice. *

Moral courage

Character

Reason

The will

Prejudices
A branch of pure philosophy dealing with physical universe. *

Epistemology

Logic

Cosmology

Aesthetics

Theodicy

They are inherently directional and imply normativity. *

'gawi'

'kagawian'

'gawa'

habituation

'goals'

An action performed with knowledge, freedom and intention. *

A-moral activity

Human act

Culture

The good

Act of man
In ethics what is equivalent to “what we ought to be”? *

A-moral activity

Human act

The good

Culture

The Latin word for the English term, ‘custom’. *

"mos" or "moris"

"philos"

"sophia"

"ethos"

"logos"

In the story about the Gyges' Ring, who eventually turned to be an evil doer? *

The Gyges

The skeleton

The metallic horse

Glaucon

The ring
A branch of pure philosophy dealing with the nature of God. *

Logic

Theodicy

Aesthetics

Cosmology

Epistemology

The branch of philosophy dealing with what is beyond the physical aspects of
things or the transcendental realities. *

Anthropology

Metaphysics

Rational psychology

Ontology

Ethics

The branch of philosophy dealing with ‘being’ in its most general form. *

Ethics

Anthropology

Metaphysics

Ontology

Rational psychology
In the allegory of the cave by Plato, who were represented by the prisoners in the
cave? *

Each and everyone of us

The philosophers

The learned

The ignorant

The truth seekers

The extreme opposite as the excess of the deficiency that is lack of spirit. *

bashfulness

boastfulness

Obsequiousness

buffoonery

irascibility

He was immortalized by Plato as the intelligent and courageous teacher who


leads his hearers nearer to the truth. *

Aristotle

Kant

Socrates

Protagoras

Plato
A kind of human activity that is neither moral nor immoral. *

Culture

Human act

A-moral activity

Act of man

The good

A branch of pure philosophy dealing with the nature of our thoughts. *

Logic

Epistemology

Aesthetics

Theodicy

Cosmology

The deficiency as the virtue of proper pride. *

cowardice

insensibility

meanness

paltriness

smallness of soul
The branch of philosophy dealing with the nature of the human soul. *

Rational psychology

Anthropology

Metaphysics

Ethics

Ontology

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