Description
Answer the following questions. Though the questions are subjective, there are elements in them, which you must demonstrate that you understand and can correctly apply the various terminology and views of the philosophers that we have studied this year.PLEASE DO NOT WRITE WHAT YOU THINK I WANT TO HEAR. Tell me what you believe to be true.
When writing this exam, please make sure that your work is your own. For any exams that meet the definition of academic dishonesty (if needed please refer to syllabus for the definition) in any form, those students will fail the course and will be turned over to the school for academic dishonesty.
Answer all the following questions (5-7 sentences each question). When answering the questions, tie in what you have learned from the philosophers that we have studied for this semester.
1. Tell which philosopher(s) you agreed with the most and explain why? Please be specific and support your answers with argumentation.
2. Tell which philosopher(s) you disagreed with the most and explain why? Please be specific and support your answers with argumentation.
3. Has anything you have read or heard discussed caused you to change, modify, or just to think differently about what you thought before?
4. Josef Pieper speaks of the beginning of philosophy as being wonder. Take a moment to relate an experience of wonder that you have undergone that may have helped you to see life differently.
Explanation & Answer
Attached.
Running head: PHILOSOPHY
1
Philosophy
Name
Institutional Affiliation
PHILOSOPHY
2
Philosophy
Over the semester, the most agreeable philosopher is Plato, who in The Five Dialogues
proposes that the one should ensure that they live well. Crito is a dialogue that represents
Socrates stand on morality and justice (Plato, Grube, & Cooper, 1938). Even when offered an
opportunity to escape prison by his wealthy friend, he maintains his sanity and insists on obeying
the law. The proposed philosophy is the fact that one should not just live but should live well
regardless of governmental injustices. His decision to forego his freedom but let justice take its
course is the essential elem...
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