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4.6: Review Questions

  • Page ID
    162464
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    4.1 Historiography and the History of Philosophy

    1. What are the advantage and disadvantages of a presentist approach to the history of philosophy?
    2. What are the advantages and disadvantages of a contextualist approach to the history of philosophy?
    3. What approach to the history of philosophy represents a middle ground between the presentists and the contextualists?

    4.2 Classical Philosophy

    4. What evidence suggests that many of the ideas that we attribute to Greek philosophers may have had their origin in ancient Egypt or Babylonia?
    5. How can one justify Parmenides’s claim that the world is unchanging?
    6. What are Aristotle’s four causes, and how did he apply them?
    7. How can one justify Parmenides’s claim that the world is unchanging?
    8. What are Aristotle’s four causes, and how did he apply them?

    4.3 Jewish, Christian, and Islamic Philosophy

    9. How is Jewish, Christian, and Muslim philosophy different from classical philosophy?
    10. How did Philo of Alexandria develop Plato and Aristotle’s ideas to explain the creation?
    11. How did Ibn Sina’s scientific approach differ from that of the Aristotle and the Epicureans?

    This page titled 4.6: Review Questions is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Nathan Smith et al. (OpenStax) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.