[{"id":193860,"question":"What all existentialists have in common, according to Sartre, is the view that","choices":[{"text":"God does not exist, and so everything is permitted","value":"A"},{"text":"All humans share a common nature","value":"B"},{"text":"existence precedes essence","value":"C"},{"text":"essence precedes existence","value":"D"},{"value":"E"}],"correctAnswer":3},{"id":193859,"question":"According to Sartre , existentialism is a doctrine intended strictly for","choices":[{"text":"All people","value":"A"},{"text":"specialists and philosophers","value":"B"},{"text":"Europeans","value":"C"},{"text":"atheists","value":"D"},{"value":"E"}],"correctAnswer":2},{"id":193858,"question":"According to Sartre , existentialism is a doctrine intended strictly for","choices":[{"text":"All people","value":"A"},{"text":"specialists and philosophers","value":"B"},{"text":"Europeans","value":"C"},{"text":"atheists","value":"D"},{"value":"E"}],"correctAnswer":2},{"id":193857,"question":"Hume sees no difficulty in the possibility of \"an eternal succession of objects ,\" without beginning or end . This is meant to be an objection to","choices":[{"text":"The Argument from Design","value":"A"},{"text":"The Cosmological Argument","value":"B"},{"text":"Kierkegaard's leap of faith","value":"C"},{"text":"Both B and C","value":"D"},{"value":"E"}],"correctAnswer":4},{"id":193856,"question":"Kierkegaard tells us that only ethical interest is interest","choices":[{"text":"In the well-being of those less fortunate","value":"A"},{"text":"In the sincerity of others","value":"B"},{"text":"On one's own subjective reality","value":"C"},{"text":"In objective reality","value":"D"},{"text":"In one's relation to one's community","value":"E"}],"correctAnswer":3},{"id":193855,"question":"Kierkegaard says it is a mistake for me to ask about another person's mind, because i risk the possibility of","choices":[{"text":"Violating the other person's solitude","value":"A"},{"text":"Being deceived","value":"B"},{"text":"Entanglement","value":"C"},{"text":"Sin","value":"D"},{"text":"All of the above","value":"E"}],"correctAnswer":2},{"id":193854,"question":"The essential feature(s) of Kierkegaard's philosophy","choices":[{"text":"His opposition to the religious views of the burghers","value":"A"},{"text":"The \"leap of faith\"","value":"B"},{"text":"The subjectivity of truth","value":"C"},{"text":"Both A and B","value":"D"},{"text":"Both B and C","value":"E"}],"correctAnswer":4},{"id":193853,"question":"Kierkegaard claims that a rational proof of God's existence is impossible because","choices":[{"text":"God would not want such a proof to be possible","value":"A"},{"text":"God is infinite, and the mind of man is finite","value":"B"},{"text":"if we could prove God's existence , we would have done so by now","value":"C"},{"text":"it would remove God's essential mysstery","value":"D"},{"text":"None of these","value":"E"}],"correctAnswer":2},{"id":193852,"question":"Which argument does Kierkegaard use for the existence of God?","choices":[{"text":"The Argument from Design","value":"A"},{"text":"The Argument from first Cause","value":"B"},{"text":"The Ontological Argument","value":"C"},{"text":"A version of the Cosmological Argument","value":"D"},{"text":"Kierkegaard gives no argument for the existence of God","value":"E"}],"correctAnswer":5},{"id":193851,"question":"Truth according to Kierkegaard is achieved by","choices":[{"text":"Using rational means to prove a belief","value":"A"},{"text":"Using empirical methods to verify a belief","value":"B"},{"text":"Showing that contrary of a belief entails a contradiction","value":"C"},{"text":"Possessing a belief that you hold passionately and without doubt","value":"D"},{"text":"None of the above","value":"E"}],"correctAnswer":4}]