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44 Terms

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Here’s a combined, clear, and Quizlet-ready set of those flashcards with merged and streamlined entries for you:

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What was St. Augustine's view on good and evil?

Evil is not created by God; it is the absence or corruption of good. God made all things good. Evil arises from human free will when people turn away from God.

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How did St. Augustine view history?

History is linear and purposeful, starting with Creation and ending with the Last Judgment. It reflects a divine plan and the struggle between the City of God (spiritual) and the City of Man (earthly).

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What did St. Augustine believe about Creation?

God created the world out of nothing (ex nihilo). Time itself was created by God. Creation is good, orderly, and intentional.

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What is the Kingdom of God according to St. Augustine?

A spiritual kingdom of those who follow God's will, existing now through faith and eternally in heaven. It opposes the sinful City of Man.

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What is the Socratic Method of learning and teaching?

A method of asking and answering questions to spark critical thinking. Socrates believed truth comes from dialogue and self-discovery, not lectures.

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What is the Acropolis?

A hill in Athens that was the religious and political center of ancient Greek life.

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What is the Parthenon?

A temple on the Acropolis dedicated to Athena, symbolizing Athens’ cultural and political achievements.

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What was the central question of Medieval philosophy?

How can faith and reason be reconciled?

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`All nature is composed of…

Four basic elements — Earth, Water, Air, and Fire (Empedocles). Everything in nature is made from these fundamental substances.

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Nature consists of tiny blocks that…

Combine in different ways to form everything (Democritus' atoms). Everything is made of invisible, indivisible particles called atoms.

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He is wisest who…

Knows that he knows nothing (Socrates). Highlights the importance of humility and continuous questioning in learning.

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Women are…

Incomplete versions of men (Aristotle). Aristotle believed women were lesser or incomplete males in a natural hierarchy.

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I think…

Therefore I am (Descartes). Self-awareness is proof of existence; foundational statement in philosophy.

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Ideas vs….

Matter — the world of physical things (Plato). Distinguishes eternal perfect ideas (Forms) from imperfect material world.

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The myth of the cave dweller illustrates that…

People mistake shadows (illusions) for reality; true knowledge is seeing beyond appearances (Plato).

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One cannot rely on his/her senses because…

Senses deceive us and only show shadows of the true forms (Plato). The physical world is an imperfect reflection of Forms.

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Everything is made after a timeless mold or form that is…

Perfect and eternal (Plato's Forms). All physical things copy perfect, eternal Forms.

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We should seek pleasure but weigh…

The consequences of pleasure and pain carefully (Epicureans). True pleasure comes from avoiding pain and living modestly.

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Through…

Knowledge and friendship, we can live a healthy and happy life (Epicureans). Wisdom and close relationships are keys to happiness.

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True happiness is not found in…

Material things; we should live a life of frugality and self-control (Stoics). Happiness comes from inner virtue, not possessions.

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Man must accept his destiny, even sickness and death, as…

An inevitable part of nature (Stoics). Acceptance of fate and focus on what’s controllable.

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What was St. Augustine's view on good and evil?

Evil is not created by God; it is the absence or corruption of good. God made all things good. Evil arises from human free will — when people turn away from God.

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How did St. Augustine view history?

History is linear and purposeful — it starts with Creation and ends with the Last Judgment. It reflects a divine plan and the struggle between the City of God (spiritual) and the City of Man (earthly).

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What did St. Augustine believe about Creation?

God created the world out of nothing (ex nihilo). Time itself was created by God. Creation is good, orderly, and intentional.

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What is the Kingdom of God according to St. Augustine?

It’s a spiritual kingdom made up of those who follow God's will. It exists now through faith and eternally in heaven. It stands opposed to the sinful City of Man.

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What is the Socratic Method of learning and teaching?

A method of asking and answering questions to spark critical thinking. Socrates believed truth comes from dialogue and self-discovery — not lectures.

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What is the Acropolis?

A hill in Athens that was the religious and political center of ancient Greek life.

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What is the Parthenon?

A temple on the Acropolis dedicated to Athena. It symbolizes Athens’ cultural and political achievements.

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What was the central question of Medieval philosophy?

How can faith and reason be reconciled? Thinkers like Augustine and Aquinas tried to unite Christian belief with Greek philosophy.

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Who was Europe’s first biologist?

Aristotle. He classified plants and animals through observation — an early form of empirical science.

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What was the Oracle at Delphi?

A priestess of Apollo who gave prophetic answers. People asked her about the future. Above the temple was the phrase: “Know thyself.”

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What did “Know thyself” mean to Socrates?

It was the core of his philosophy — true wisdom starts with self-awareness.

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What was Plato’s view of reality?

Plato believed in a separate world of perfect Forms or Ideas. What we see are imperfect copies. True knowledge comes from reason and thinking, not the senses.

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What was Aristotle’s view of reality?

Aristotle believed we should trust our senses and observe the world. Knowledge comes from studying nature and organizing what we experience.

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How did Plato and Aristotle differ in their approach to knowledge?

Plato was a rationalist who believed in innate ideas and Forms beyond the physical world. Aristotle was an empiricist who believed knowledge comes from experience and observation.

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What did Epicureans believe brought happiness?

Epicureans believed happiness comes from calm, friendship, avoiding fear and pain, and living simply. True pleasure is peace of mind (ataraxia).

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What did Hedonists believe brought happiness?

Hedonists believed in seeking immediate pleasure through indulgence — food, drink, and fun — even if it caused pain later.

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How do Epicureans and Hedonists differ?

Epicureans valued moderate, lasting pleasure and peace. Hedonists chased intense, short-term pleasures, often without concern for consequences.

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What do Rationalists believe about knowledge?

Rationalists (like Plato and Descartes) believe knowledge comes from reason and thought, not experience. Truths can be known through logic alone.

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What do Empiricists believe about knowledge?

Empiricists (like Aristotle, Locke, and Hume) believe all knowledge comes from sensory experience. The mind starts as a blank slate.

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