Home Horoscope for the week Albert Camus: An absurd man. The risk and difficulties of human freedom. Cheat sheet on "philosophy" Camus considers the most important essence characteristic of being

Albert Camus: An absurd man. The risk and difficulties of human freedom. Cheat sheet on "philosophy" Camus considers the most important essence characteristic of being

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Augustine Aurelius is the most prominent representative of the medieval philosophy of the period ... patristics, scholastics

Agnosticism is characteristic of philosophy: conventionalism; positivism; subjective idealism

The axiological aspect characterizes such property of consciousness as selectivity.

Dynamic analysis scientific knowledge becomes one of the central problems in the philosophical school of ... post-positivism

Angelic Doctor" is called the medieval thinker Thomas Aquinas.

The attributes of matter are ... universal and inalienable properties of material objects

B. Spinoza believed that there is only one substance that is the cause of itself - this is ... nature

The basic concept of the materialistic approach to history is ... a socio-economic formation

Infinity and infinity, both in the existential and cognitive senses, is called ... infinity

The existence of a certain class of natural objects (microorganisms, plants and wildlife, including humans) is called ... life

B. Russell's statement "... The circumstances of people's lives largely determine their philosophy, but vice versa, their philosophy largely determines these circumstances" reflects the social function of philosophy.

In the dualism of R. Descartes, substances are ... extended and thinking

In Italian philosophy, the image of a utopian state - the city of the Sun - was created by ... T. Campanella

As the official ideology of the Chinese Empire were adopted philosophical ideas schools of ... Confucianism

In Marxist philosophy, the science of the most general laws of the development of nature, society and thinking is ... Dialectics

In thinking, the following levels are distinguished: reason, reason

In modern European philosophy, the question of the fundamental principle of the world is solved with the help of the concept ... substance

The classical concept of truth is based on the principle of ... correspondence

The basis of the modern biological picture of the world is the principle of ... evolution

At the heart of modern scientific picture the world lies ... the theory of relativity

At the heart of the philosophical picture of the world lies the solution to the problem of ... being

Unlike non-scientific knowledge, scientific knowledge is characterized by ... consistency, evidence

Unlike idealism, materialism considers the ideal as ... a subjective image of objective reality

Within the framework of Chinese philosophy, there is an idea that the world arose as a result of the interaction of five principles (Wu-xing), such a position in philosophy is called ... pluralism

In modern epistemology, there are various concepts of truth: classical (correspondent); conventionalist.

In modern scientific literature, technology in the broad sense of the word means any means and methods of activity created by man to achieve any goals.

In medieval philosophy, the source and highest form of being was considered (-as, -axis) ... God

In medieval philosophy, the special status of a person in the system of the world order is determined by the fact that he was created ... in the image and likeness of God

In the structure of consciousness, along with thinking, they distinguish ... Will and emotions

There are two periods in Kant's work: pre-critical; critical.

In the tradition of German classical philosophy, the system of subjective idealism was created by ... I. Fichte

In the utopian writings of Thomas More and Tommaso Campanella, the following features of an ideal state are presented: compulsory labor / education / common property

In the philosophy of postmodernism, the concept of "simulacrum" was introduced, denoting a copy of a non-existent original.

In the philosophy of the Enlightenment, the highest historical value of mankind is considered ... progress

In the philosophy of the Enlightenment, the main sign of a person was considered (-s) ... reason

In philosophy, various historical theories, a certain "philosophy of history" are denoted by the term ... historicism

In the philosophy of the twentieth century, the idea of ​​the end of history is developed by the American philosopher ... F. Fukuyama

In the philosophical system of G. Hegel, the central concept that guides and implements the process of development of everything that exists is ... the absolute idea

In the twentieth century, the opposition of two social systems - socialism and capitalism, was designated by the term ... "bipolar world"

In the Renaissance, a new natural philosophy is emerging, which is characterized by the following features: pantheism; the idea of ​​the identity of the micro- and macrocosms, as well as ... hylozoism, the belief in the liveliness and even animation of all being / the idea of ​​self-activity of matter

In the ethics of I. Kant, the universal and necessary moral law, which does not depend on the actual conditions of human will and therefore is unconditionally obligatory for execution, is called ... the categorical imperative

The most important social value is ... a person

A. Camus considers the most important essential characteristic of being ... absurdity

The most important component of the material and production sphere is ... labor

An important characteristic of development is ... the irreversibility of changes

The leading epistemological problem of modern times is the problem of the relationship between the subject and objective reality.

Man's faith in the world of divine revelation, ideal values ​​is characteristic of _ cognition. religious

The whole world is a text, ”says the philosophical school of ... hermeneutics

Interdependent, mutually stimulating science and technology is called technical progress

The relationship between the problem of truth and the analysis of the logical structure of language is the subject of research in philosophical school… neopositivism

The type of matter that exists exclusively on Earth is called ... socially organized matter

Vital values ​​are linked to the ideals of…healthy living

The external essence of a phenomenon that justifies its existence is called ... the meaning

The internal content of an object, expressed in the stable unity of all the diverse and contradictory properties of being, is called ... the essence

The internal dismemberment of material existence is called ... structural

The ancient school called for refraining from judgments ... skepticism

The emergence of fundamentally new images and ideas in the mind is associated with such a person's cognitive ability as intuition.

The emergence of engineering activity is associated with the emergence of manufactory and machine production.

The question of the relation of thinking to being as the main question of philosophy was formulated by F. Engels.

Questions - is the world cognizable, is truth achievable? - relate to ___________ problems of philosophy. epistemological

Questions - what comes first? what is being, substance, matter? - relate to _____________ problems of philosophy. ontological

Questions - what is good and evil? what is morality, morality, dignity? - relate to __________ problems of philosophy. ethical

Questions of anthroposociogenesis, the essence and existence of man belong to _____________ problems of philosophy. Anthropological

Upbringing and education belong to __________ culture. spiritual

Perception is a form of reflection of reality at the level of cognition. sensual

Whole concentration, immutability and fullness of being and life, endless duration is called ... eternity

The entire philosophy of the Hellenistic period is permeated by the contradiction between ... universalism and individualism

Any inanimate system tends to the most probable state for it, that is, to chaos, - says the law of ... entropy

Putting forward a theory about the presence of many spiritual entities - "monads" that make up the fundamental principle of the world, G. V. Leibniz becomes a representative of ontological ... pluralism

Performing an ideological function, philosophy formulates ... a system of certain values

The expression "Man is a wolf to man" belongs to ... T. Hobbes

The statement “It (technology) exposes a person to a process of dismemberment, separation, by virtue of which a person, as it were, ceases to be a natural being, as he was before” belongs to N.A. Berdyaev

The saying “Man is the measure of all things: those that exist in that they exist, and those that do not exist in that they do not exist” belongs to ... Protagoras

The highest degree of a valuable, or the best, completed state of any phenomenon is called ... an ideal

The highest form of mental activity inherent in the human way of life is called ... consciousness

The highest level of knowledge and ideal development of the world in the form of theories, ideas, human goals is ... Thinking

The highest good for a person, from the point of view of Renaissance humanism, is ... pleasure, happiness

GV Plekhanov is a representative of Marxism.

Hegel considered world history as a natural process of development ... of an absolute idea

The main danger of technological progress is that the development of technology: contributes to the rapid pollution of the environment; threatens to become an end in itself.

L. Feuerbach sees the main obstacle to happiness in ... the alienation of human essence

The main difference between faith and knowledge is ... subjective significance

Global problems associated with the catastrophic destruction of the natural basis for the existence of world civilization, environmental pollution, climate change, are called ... environmental

The global problems associated with an excessive increase in the population of the Earth, the deterioration of the health of the population, the aging of the population in developed countries, the high birth rate in underdeveloped countries, are called ... demographic

The epistemological position that draws an insurmountable boundary between experience and objective reality is called agnosticism.

The epistemological trend that doubts the reliability of human knowledge and recognizes the relativity of all knowledge is called ... skepticism

Epistemology studies: human cognitive abilities; the structure of the process of cognition; the problem of knowing the world.

The humanistic function of philosophy includes ... the formation of values ​​\u200b\u200band ideals / helping a person during periods of unstable development of society

Movement is any change.

driving force of any development, according to dialectics, is ... a contradiction

The driving force of social development is divine providence, according to representatives of the ___ approach ... theological

Two logically possible alternative interpretations of scientific knowledge are: non-classical philosophy of science, classical philosophy of science.

The motto "Know thyself" is associated in the history of philosophy with the name of ... Socrates

The activity of thinking aimed at creating a theoretical world and models describing it is called construction.

The activity of receiving, storing, processing and systematizing conscious concrete sensory and conceptual images is called ... Cognition

The activities of the philosophers of the Enlightenment, aimed at criticizing the vices of society and the state, existing on the basis of church institutions, can be designated as ... anti-clericalism

Dialectics appeared as an opposition to ... metaphysics

Dialectics is the methodology of knowledge, which requires the study of phenomena in their inconsistency, variability and interconnection.

Dialectical-materialistic ontology refuses the concept of "______ being" ... pure

Dialectical materialism singles out ... practical activity as the essence of man

The duration and sequence of successive events is called ... time

Description of work

They can be inductive and deductive. inference
Augustine Aurelius is the most prominent representative medieval philosophy period ... patristics, scholastics
The author of the concept of a "single industrial society" is ... R. aron
The author of the concept of "methodological anarchism" is P. Feyerabend
The author of the concept of "justified rationalism" is ... G. Bashlyar

The substratum-substantial concept considers matter as a carrier of properties different from them. The idea that all things, phenomena of the world have a certain universal, unified material basis (substance), formed the basis of the substratum-substantial concept that arose back in Antiquity, in the teachings of the pre-Socratics, and existed in science until the 19th century. A material substance is usually characterized in it by a small number of unchanging properties (impenetrability, indivisibility, mass, extension, etc.), which are borrowed from experimental data and which are given universal significance. The properties of material objects are, as it were, “hung” on an absolutely unchanging basis, therefore such an understanding of matter is metaphysical in terms of

its essence - it is opposed to the attributive understanding of matter, formulated by dialectical materialism.

Modern Philosophy West

The representative of the hermeneutic tradition in philosophy is ...

V. Dilthey

In the history of philosophy, a direction has been formed that sets one of its tasks the interpretation of the text - hermeneutics. V. Dilthey expanded the concept of hermeneutics to its understanding as a special philosophical discipline, acting as a kind of methodology for the sciences about the spirit. V. Dilthey expands the scope of hermeneutics not only to texts, but also to actions, gestures, facial expressions, etc.

In the philosophy of the twentieth century, the idea of ​​the end of history is developed by the American philosopher ...

F. Fukuyama

The end of history is a concept used in philosophy to denote a social transformation, during which a number of principles that dominated a given society are abandoned. In the 20th century, the idea of ​​the end of history was used to redefine the prospects for advanced industrial societies. Proponents of this approach note the change in the role and place of Western civilization in modern world. The discussion about the end of history in this aspect intensified after the publication of first an article (1989) and then a book (1992) by the American political scientist F. Fukuyama, entitled "The End of History".

The need to defend the consistency of religious truths in the context of the dominant scientific picture of the world becomes a prerequisite for the formation of a philosophical school...

Neo-Thomism

Neo-Thomism is a philosophical trend that is trying to rethink the philosophical legacy of Thomas Aquinas, modernize it, and adapt it to modernity.

"The whole world is a text," says the philosophical school...

hermeneutics

The philosophical school of hermeneutics argues that we see reality through the prism of culture, which is a set of fundamental texts. Therefore, the task of philosophy becomes the interpretation and interpretation of literary texts.

One of the most prominent representatives of the "philosophy of life" is ...

F. Nietzsche

The principle of determining the significance of knowledge by its practical consequences was formulated in the philosophical school ...

pragmatism

Pragmatism (from other Greek πράγμα - deed, action) is a current of American thought in which the factor of practice is used as a methodological principle for solving existential, epistemological, ethical, religious (and other) issues by comparing the "practical consequences" arising from one theory or another.

The relationship of the problem of truth with the analysis of the logical structure of language is the subject of research in the philosophical school ...

Neopositivism

In connection with the concept of analyzing the language of science, the term “verifiability” (from Latin verificare – to prove the truth) was introduced in the philosophical school of neopositivism. In the neo-positivist interpretation, "verifiability" means that any assertion about the world that claims to be of scientific and cognitive significance, through a logical analysis of its constituent terms, must be reduced to a set of so-called protocol sentences that fix the data of "pure experience". Thus, the principle of verifiability acted as a criterion for the truth of statements about the world.

Analysis of the dynamics of scientific knowledge becomes one of the central problems in the philosophical school...

post-positivism

Post-positivism arose as a critical reaction to the program of the empirical foundation of science put forward by the previous neo-positivism. In particular, post-positivism abandoned the neo-positivist ideal of scientific knowledge as a logically systematized set of statements (of which theories of mathematical natural science were considered examples); the analysis was reoriented to the dynamics of scientific knowledge, which began to be interpreted as the competition of scientific communities (T. Kuhn).

The founder of phenomenology is the philosopher ...

E. Husserl

The clash of civilizations as a scenario for the near future of world history is described by the philosopher ...

S. Huntington

A. Camus considers the most important essential characteristic of being ...

Absurd

spiritual value human personality in the context of the realities of the twentieth century, he defends the religious-idealistic trend ...

personalism

Existentialism focuses primarily on the problem...

existence

The founder of psychoanalytic philosophy is...

Z. Freud

According to J.-P. Sartre, the specificity of human existence lies in the fact that ...

Existence precedes essence

In the work "Existentialism is humanism" J.-P. Sartre explains the position of atheistic existentialism with the following statement: "there is at least one being in which existence precedes essence, a being that exists before it can be defined by any concept, and this being is a person."

In the philosophy of postmodernism, the concept of "simulacrum" was introduced, denoting ...

Copy of non-existent original

Simulacrum (French simulacres, from simulation - simulation) is a term in the philosophy of postmodernism to designate an extra-conceptual means of fixing the experienced state. Genetically goes back to the term "simulacrum", which Plato meant "copy of a copy". Postmodernism radicalizes the interpretation of the term and denotes by it "a copy, the original of which never existed."

Topic: Consciousness and Cognition

Forms of rational knowledge are ...

concept

Judgment

inference

Along with scientific knowledge, can be identified...

Ordinary

religious

Along with scientific knowledge, ordinary and religious knowledge can be distinguished. Ordinary knowledge is focused on ensuring that its results make it possible to make everyday life of people more efficient. It accompanies a person throughout his life. Religious knowledge is dogmatic and based on a person's belief in an ideal spiritual world. Artistic, philosophical, mystical and esoteric knowledge are also distinguished.

Forms of social consciousness are ...

Morality

The science

Religion

The forms of social consciousness are morality, science, religion. Public consciousness is a set of ideas, theories, moral attitudes, religious images, various views arising from social practice, reflecting the whole diversity of being.

According to reflection theory, consciousness is...

Form of reflection of reality

brain product

The theory of reflection was developed within the framework of the dialectical materialist concept and is associated with the names of K. Marx and F. Engels. According to the theory of reflection, consciousness is the highest form of reflection of reality. Consciousness is a form of highly organized matter (that is, a product of the brain). The brain is the material base of consciousness. The human brain reflects the environment in ideal images, controls human behavior.

Z. Freud in the human psyche, along with "I", singled out ...

Super-I

In the structure of consciousness, along with thinking, there are ...

Will

The main layers of the psyche, according to Z. Freud, are ...

Conscious

Unconscious

Representatives of vulgar materialism, who considered the nature of consciousness to be material, are ...

L. Buechner

K. Vogt

J. Moleschott

Representatives of subjective idealism, who considered consciousness to be a set of sensations, are ...

J. Berkeley

D. Hume

Forms sensory knowledge are…

Feeling

Perception

Performance

Human cognitive abilities are...

Perception

Making sense

The cognitive abilities of a person include perception, understanding of the surrounding world and oneself. Cognitive abilities are the individual qualities of a person. Perception is characterized by a specific experience of direct contact with the real world (a sense of the reality of the perceived). Comprehension is the comprehension of reality in certain practical, theoretical, cultural, personal contexts. The result of comprehension is the development of knowledge (everyday, scientific, philosophical).

Philosophical direction, recognizing the substantiality of the unconscious, is called ...

Irrationalism

The philosophical direction that recognizes the substantiality of the unconscious is irrationalism (F. Schelling, E. von Hartmann,

A. Schopenhauer, F. Nietzsche). This direction not only recognizes the reality of the unconscious (unlike, for example, postpositivism, analytical philosophy, existentialism, dialectical materialism), but also endows it with an independent, independent existence (in contrast to the psychoanalysis of Z. Freud, who considers the unconscious as a sphere of the psyche, that is, the inner world of animals and humans). Thus, F. Schelling considered nature to be a "dormant spirit", and consciousness - an awake spirit; A. Schopenhauer considered the unconscious world “will to live” to be the essence of all that exists, which is objectified in the form of nature and man.

The activity of consciousness is understood as its ...

Answers to test tasks in PHILOSOPHY 2012-13 ac. Year (2 semester) for EMF and FUPP

1. "The whole world is a text," says the philosophical school... hermeneutics

2. “Truth is an agreement,” the representatives believed ... conventionalism

3. From the point of view of conventionalism, the main criterion of truth is ... an agreement between scientists

4. From the point of view of pragmatism, the main criterion for truth is ... success

20. Analysis of the dynamics of scientific knowledge becomes one of the central problems in the philosophical school ... post-positivism

21. The attributes of matter are… universal and inalienable properties of material objects

22. B. Spinoza believed that there is only one substance that is the cause of itself - this is ... nature

23. The basic concept of the materialistic approach to history is ... socio-economic formation

24. Being a certain class of natural objects (microorganisms, plants and animal world, including humans) is called ... life

25. In Italian philosophy, the image of a utopian state - the city of the Sun - was created ... T. Campanella

26. In Marxist philosophy, the science of the most general laws of the development of nature, society and thinking is ... dialectics

27. The following levels are distinguished in thinking: mind reason

28. In modern European philosophy, the question of the fundamental principle of the world is solved with the help of the concept ... substance

29. The basis of the modern biological picture of the world is the principle of ... evolution

30. At the heart of the modern scientific picture of the world lies ... theory of relativity

31. At the heart of the philosophical picture of the world lies the solution to the problem of ... being

32. Unlike idealism, materialism considers the ideal as ... a subjective image of objective reality

33. Within the framework of Chinese philosophy, there is an idea that the world arose as a result of the interaction of five primary principles (U-xing), such a position in philosophy is called ... pluralism

34. In medieval philosophy, (-as, -axis) was considered the source and highest form of being ... God

35. In medieval philosophy, the special status of a person in the system of the world order is determined by the fact that he was created ... in the image and likeness of God

36. In the philosophy of postmodernism, the concept of "simulacrum" was introduced, denoting copy of non-existent original

37. In the philosophy of the Enlightenment, the main feature of a person was considered (-s) ... reason

38. In philosophy, various historical theories, a certain "philosophy of history" are denoted by the term ... historicism

39. In philosophical system G. Hegel, the central concept that guides and implements the process of development of all things is ... absolute idea

40. In the twentieth century, the opposition of two social systems - socialism and capitalism, was designated by the term ... "bipolar world"

41. In the ethics of I. Kant, the universal and necessary moral law, which does not depend on the actual conditions of human will and therefore is unconditionally obligatory for execution, is called ... the categorical imperative

42. The most important social value is ... Human

43. A. Camus considers the most important essential characteristic of being ... absurd

44. The most important component of the material and production sphere is ... labor

45. An important characteristic of development is ... the irreversibility of changes

46. ​​Man's faith in the world of divine revelation, ideal values ​​is characteristic of _ knowledge. religious

47. The relationship of the problem of truth with the analysis of the logical structure of language is the subject of research in the philosophical school ... neopositivism

48. The internal content of an object, expressed in the stable unity of all the diverse and contradictory properties of being, is called ... the essence

49. The internal dismemberment of material existence is called ... structural

50. The ancient school called for refraining from judgments ... skepticism

51. Questions - is the world cognizable, is the truth achievable? - relate to ___________ problems of philosophy. epistemological

52. Questions - what comes first? what is being, substance, matter? - relate to _____________ problems of philosophy. ontological

53. Questions - what is good and evil? what is morality, morality, dignity? - relate to __________ problems of philosophy. ethical

54. Upbringing and education belong to __________ culture. spiritual

55. Perception is a form of reflection of reality at the level of cognition. sensual

56. Whole collection, immutability and fullness of being and life, endless duration is called ... eternity

57. Any inanimate system tends to the most probable state for it, that is, to chaos, - says the law ... of entropy

58. Putting forward a theory about the presence of many spiritual entities - "monads" that make up the fundamental principle of the world, G. V. Leibniz becomes a representative of ontological ... pluralism

59. Performing an ideological function, philosophy formulates ... a system of certain values

60. The expression "Man is a wolf to man" belongs to ... T. Hobbes

61. The statement “Man is the measure of all things: those that exist in that they exist, and those that do not exist in that they do not exist” belongs to ... Protagoras

62. The highest degree of a valuable, or the best, complete state of any phenomenon is called ... ideal

63. The highest form of mental activity inherent in the human way of life is called ... consciousness

64. The highest level of knowledge and ideal development of the world in the form of theories, ideas, human goals is ... thinking

65. The highest good for a person, from the point of view of Renaissance humanism, is ... pleasure, happiness

66. Hegel considered world history as a natural process of development ... of an absolute idea

67. L. Feuerbach sees the main obstacle to happiness in ... alienation of human nature

68. The main difference between faith and knowledge is ... subjective significance

69. Global problems associated with the catastrophic destruction of the natural basis for the existence of world civilization, environmental pollution, climate change, are called ... environmental

70. Global problems associated with an excessive increase in the population of the Earth, deteriorating health of the population, aging of the population in developed countries, high birth rates in underdeveloped countries, are called ... demographic

71. An epistemological trend that doubts the reliability of human knowledge and recognizes the relativity of all knowledge is called ... skepticism

72. The driving force of any development, according to dialectics, is ... contradiction

73. The motto "Know thyself" is associated in the history of philosophy with the name of ... Socrates

74. The activity of receiving, storing, processing and systematizing conscious concrete sensory and conceptual images is called ... cognition

75. The activity of philosophers of the Enlightenment, aimed at criticizing the vices of society and the state, existing on the basis of church institutions, can be designated as ... anti-clericalism

76. Dialectic appeared as an opposition... metaphysics

77. Dialectical materialism singles out ... practical activity as the essence of man

78. The duration and sequence of successive events is called ... time

79. To distinguish between scientific and non-scientific knowledge, K. Popper proposed the principle ... falsifications

80. Medieval philosophy associated with the Christian religion is characterized by ... monotheism

81. A sufficient condition for moral action, according to Socrates, is ... knowledge of the good

82. The spiritual value of the human personality in the context of the realities of the twentieth century is defended by the religious-idealistic trend ... personalism

83. The natural end of a single living being, which only for a person acts as a defining moment of his life and worldview, is called ... death

84. The defense of Christian truths from criticism from the later ancient schools was called ... apologetics

85. Knowledge, which is directly given to the consciousness of the subject and is accompanied by a feeling of direct contact with the cognized reality, is called ... experience

86. Knowledge that deliberately distorts the idea of ​​reality is called ... anti-scientific

87. The game as a universal principle of the formation of human culture was proposed ... J. Huizingoy

88. The ideas of Marxist philosophy on Russian soil were developed by ... A. A. Bogdanov

89. An ideology that absolutizes the role of the state in society and involves extensive and active state intervention in the economic and social life of society has been called ... statism

90. The idea of ​​the “end of history” in the modern global world was proposed by ... F. Fukuyama

91. The idea as the fundamental principle of the world was proposed by ... Plato

92. The idea of ​​regression historical development suggested ... Hesiod

93. Changing an object under the influence of its inherent contradictions, factors and conditions is called ... self-propulsion

94. Historically evolving population man-made means that allow people to use natural materials, phenomena and processes to meet their needs, is called ... technology

95. A historically stable community of people, formed on the basis of a common language, territory, economic life, material and spiritual culture, is called ... a nation

96. History is a linear progressive movement, the logic of which is expressed in a change in socio-economic formations, representatives of the ____________ approach believe. formational

97. The history of the culture of mankind, in which there were many original cultural traditions, is called ... world culture

98. The global problems of interstate relations include the problem of ... war and peace

99. The natural sciences include ... physics chemistry biology

100. The ideal objects of scientific knowledge include ... geometric point, ideal of justice

101. General scientific methods include ... abstraction, analysis, induction

102. The main forms of theoretical knowledge include ... problem, hypothesis, law

103. The features of personal cognition include ... dependence on the abilities of the subject

104. The principle of ... consistency

105. Among the Socratic schools is the school of ... cynics

106. K. Jaspers believes that the peculiarity of modern technical civilization is that ... technology is only a tool in the hands of man

107. The picture of the world that arose in the 17th century, based on the principles of deism, is called ... mechanistic

110. Classical science is based on the principle of ... objectivity

111. The classical definition of personality in Western European philosophy was given by ... Boethius

112. A quantitative measure of possibility is called ... probability

113. Concept modern science and philosophy, which considers it necessary to consider the evolution of human society and the biosphere in a single scientific system, is called ... co-evolution

114. The concept, according to which a person is considered as the highest value, the meaning of earthly civilization, is called ... personalism

115. The concept that man was created by God is called ... creationism

116. The criterion of the truth of knowledge, from the point of view of R. Descartes' rationalism, is ... obviousness, clarity

117. A cultural community with its own limited circle of adherents, with its own values ​​and ideas, style of clothing, language, norms of behavior, is called ... subculture

118. Personality as a special individual entity has become an object philosophical analysis during Middle Ages

119. Personality as a subject of social relations is characterized by ... activity

120. Materialistic dialectics was developed and substantiated by ... F. Engels

121. An interdisciplinary direction that studies the process of evolution and self-organization of complex systems is called ... synergetics

122. International public organization dealing with scientific research global problems is called the ___________ club. Roman

123. Metaphysics as a model of development absolutizes ... stability

124. The ideological position, which limits the role of God to the act of creating the world and setting it in motion, is called ... deism

125. The variety of objects produced by man, as well as natural things and phenomena changed by human influence, are called ... material culture

126. The thinker who introduced the concept of “world-historical spirit” into scientific circulation was ... G. Hegel

127. The thinker who substantiated the concept of "post-industrialism" is ... D. Bell

128. A thinker who upholds the priority of geographical factors in social development, was … C. Montesquieu

129. The thinker who defended the priority of the demographic factor in social development was ... T. Malthus

130. The thinker who develops the theory of the social contract of the origin of the state is ... T. Hobbes

131. A thinker who considers culture as a product of the sublimation of unconscious mental processes is ... Z. Freud

132. A thinker who considers the scientific and technological potential as the dominant indicator of historical development is ... D. Bell

133. A thinker who considers the course of development of civilizations through the “challenge-and-response” scheme is ... A. Toynbee

134. The thinker who believed that “in the modern social life of Europe ... all power in society has passed to the masses” is ... J. Ortega y Gasset

135. The thinker who argued that an outstanding person must have three decisive qualities: passion, a sense of responsibility and an eye, was ... M. Weber

136. The most general laws and values ​​of social life are studied by ... social philosophy

137. The most significant achievements of the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas were developed by the school ... Thomism

138. Direction to medieval scholasticism, which affirmed the real (physical) existence of things and recognized general concepts only by the names of things, is called ... nominalism

139. The direction in the theory of knowledge, whose representatives consider sensory experience the main source of knowledge, is called ... empiricism

140. The direction in philosophy, which considers the spiritual fundamental principle of the world, nature, being, is called ... idealism

142. Direction counting main reason global problems of science and scientific and technological progress and criticizing them is called ... anti-scientism

143. The focus on the chosen consumer, who has artistic susceptibility and material means, is characteristic of ___________ culture. Elite

145. The science that studies all forms of social behavior of living beings, including humans, based on the principles of genetics and evolutionary biology, is called ... sociobiology

146. science in the system of culture, the spiritual life of society, is called ... scientism

147. The science of the forms and methods of rational thinking is ... logic

148. The beginning of the dispute between the Slavophiles and Westernizers was laid by the publication of “Philosophical Letters” ... P. Ya. Chaadaeva

149. An indivisible, non-composite unity, the beginning of being, a measure and a prototype of a number is called ... a monad

150. The need to defend the consistency of religious truths in the context of the dominant scientific picture of the world becomes a prerequisite for the formation of a philosophical school ... neo-Thomism

151. The need to defend the consistency of religious truths in the context of the dominant scientific picture of the world becomes a prerequisite for the formation of a philosophical school ... neo-Thomism

152. The Danish philosopher is considered the immediate predecessor of existentialism ... S. Kierkegaard

153. The field of knowledge about the systemic organization of society, which studies the structural aspect of social life, is called ... sociology

154. The area of ​​knowledge in which the regularities of the “second nature” are described and studied is called ___________ sciences. Technical

155. The field of research aimed at understanding the nature of technology and assessing its impact on society, culture and man is called ... philosophy of technology

156. The field of philosophical knowledge, seeking to rationally comprehend the integrity of nature and its origin, to comprehend nature as a general, ultimate concept, is called ... natural philosophy

157. The field of knowledge, historically the first to make the transition to the proper scientific knowledge of the world, is ... mathematics

158. The image of a person as a set of instincts, drives, conflicts arises in ... psychoanalysis

159. Social being determines social consciousness, representatives of the _ approach believe. Marxist

160. Social being determines social consciousness, representatives of the _______________ approach believe. Marxist

161. A society that has achieved partnership relations with the state, capable of putting the state under its control, while ensuring the safety of its citizens, is called ... civil

162. Society, its structure and historical development are determined by the laws of nature, believe the representatives of the ____________ approach. naturalistic

163. Objective reality existing outside and independently of human consciousness and reflected by it is called ... matter

164. The limited knowledge of the historical conditions of society is reflected in the category "_____". Relative truth

165. One of the most prominent representatives of ancient Greek atomism was ... Democritus

166. One of the most prominent representatives of Roman stoicism is ... Marcus Aurelius

167. One of the most prominent representatives of the "philosophy of life" is ... F. Nietzsche

168. One of the signs of pseudoscientific theories is ... uncritical use of facts

169. One of the principles of non-classical science is ... irrationalism

170. One of the fundamental principles of modern cosmology, which fixes the connection between the large-scale properties of our Universe and the existence of man in it, is the ______________ principle. Anthropic

171. One of the brightest representatives of the Russian Enlightenment is ... A. N. Radishchev

172. One of the greatest merits of German classical philosophy is the development of the laws of objective ... dialectics

173. One of the natural-science prerequisites for the formation of Marxist philosophy is ... Ch. Darwin's theory of evolution

174. One of the first scientific pictures of the world was __________ picture of the world. Mathematical

175. One of the essential characteristics of the Hegelian philosophical system is ... panlogism

176. One of the theories that influenced the spread of the concept of "system" in all areas of scientific knowledge was ... evolutionary

177. One of the characteristics of truth is... concreteness

178. The ontological position of B. Spinoza, who claimed the existence of a single substance underlying the world, can be characterized as ... monism

179. The definition of a person as a political (social) being belongs to ... Aristotle

180. The basis of existence, acting as unchanging first principles and principles, is called ... substrate

181. The founder of objective idealism is ... Plato

182. The founder of the first system of objective idealism in the ancient tradition is the philosopher ... Plato

183. The main feature of the scientistic trend in philosophy is ... faith in the limitless possibilities of science

184. The basic laws and categories of idealistic dialectics were developed by ... G. Hegel

185. The main methods of empirical research are ... scientific observation, experiment, object description

186. The main principles of dialectics, from the standpoint of dialectical materialism, are ... universal communication and development

187. The main characteristics of space are ... 3D structure and reversibility

188. The basis of every value is ... an ideal

189. The basis of self-consciousness is… reflection

190. The founder of Russian cosmism N. F. Fedorov understood the philosophy of the common cause as ... resurrection project

191. The founder of the rationalistic method in modern European philosophy is the philosopher ... R. Descartes

192. The founder of the theory of the social contract is the philosopher ... T. Hobbes

193. The founder of the philosophical school of Neoplatonism is ... Plotinus

194. A special type of cognitive activity aimed at developing objective, systematically organized and justified knowledge about the world is called ... science

195. Attitude towards someone or something as unconditionally valuable, association and connection with someone (what) is perceived as a blessing, is called ... love

196. The denial of the socio-historical nature of the individual is characteristic of ... existentialism

197. Defending the idea of ​​a special status of the head of state, standing outside the system of philistine morality, N. Machiavelli becomes the founder of such a socio-political trend as ... real politics

198. The first scientific picture of the world (XVII-XIX centuries) was called ... mechanical

199. The transfer of culture occurs according to the principle ... "social relay races"

200. The transmission of false knowledge as true or true knowledge as false is called ... disinformation

201. The period of “Great” science begins from ... the end of the 19th - the beginning of the 20th centuries.

202. The period of medieval philosophy, marked by the concentration philosophical life around universities and the dominant desire to rationally substantiate and systematize the Christian doctrine, was called ... scholastics

203. According to M. Heidegger, _________ is the house of being. Language

204. According to Descartes, the criterion for the truth of scientific knowledge is the correct ... deduction

205. According to J.-P. Sartre, the specificity of human existence lies in the fact that ... existence precedes essence

206. According to I. Kant, the basis of personality is ... moral law

207. According to C. G. Jung, the unconscious components of the fundamental values ​​of culture are called ... archetypes

208. According to Confucius, a person must transform himself, become ... noble husband

209. According to N. Ya. Danilevsky, an original civilization, a closed self-sufficient education is called ... a cultural-historical type

210. According to Pythagoras, the harmony of the Cosmos can be comprehended with the help of ... numbers

211. According to T. Hobbes, before the emergence of the state, the natural state of society was ... war of all against all

212. The activity of consciousness is understood as its ... selectivity and purposefulness

213. An approach to the problem of the development of scientific knowledge, which affirms the principle of incommensurability of scientific theories, is called ... anti-cumulative

214. An approach to the problem of the development of scientific knowledge, stating that the main driving forces development of science are in the internal factors of scientific knowledge (internal logic of the development of science, etc.), is called ... internalism

215. The approach, according to which the role of science in the system of culture, the spiritual life of society, is absolutized, is called ... scientism

216. The approach according to which culture is a system of information codes that fix life social experience, as well as the means of fixing it, is called ... semiotic

217. The approach according to which a person is a natural being, an animal, is called ... naturalization

218. The position in epistemology, according to which the basis of knowledge is experience, is characteristic of ... empiricism

219. The position proceeding from the recognition of equality and irreducibility to each other of the two principles of being (spirit and matter) is called ... dualism

220. The position according to which matter was identified with matter, with atoms, with a complex of their properties, was called ... physicalist

221. The position according to which the world in relation to a person has two hypostases - will and representation, belongs to ... A. Schopenhauer

222. The position according to which experience not processed by the mind cannot underlie cognition is characteristic of ... rationalism

223. The position according to which there are two worlds - noumenal ("things in themselves") and phenomenal (representations of things), belongs to ... I. Kant

224. Position according to which only moral value determines value human individuality, belongs to ... I. Kant

225. Cognition of the world through works of art and literary values ​​is characteristic of cognition. Artistic

226. Knowledge of the world through works of art and literary values ​​is characteristic of ______________ knowledge. artistic

227. Complete exhaustive knowledge, which is identical to its subject and cannot be refuted with the further development of knowledge, is understood as _____________ truth. Absolute

228. The concept of "scientific community" introduces ... T. Kuhn

229. The concept of "value" appears in the works of ... I. Kant

230. A concept is a form of reflection of reality at the ______________ level of cognition. rational

231. An attempt to distinguish between scientific and non-scientific knowledge, to determine the boundaries of the field of scientific knowledge is called the problem ... demarcation

232. An attempt to synthesize philosophy and art was made by a representative of German classical philosophy ... F. Schelling

233. A potential form of being is called ... a possibility

234. The appearance of the first original philosophical texts in Rus' is attributed to ... XI-XII centuries

235. The subject of the philosophy of science at the present post-positivist stage of development is ... dynamics of knowledge

236. Deliberate erection of deliberately incorrect ideas into truth is called ... lies

237. The representative of the English Enlightenment, who substantiated the principle of separation of powers, was the philosopher ... J. Locke

238. The representative of the hermeneutic tradition in philosophy is ... V. Dilthey

239. The representative of modern philosophy, who believed that the growth of scientific knowledge occurs as a result of putting forward bold hypotheses and refuting them, is ... K. Popper

240. The idea of ​​being as a nature-mechanism that opposes man arose in the philosophy of ... Modern times

241. The idea that being is formed as a unity of matter and form belongs to ... A Christotle

242. The idea that the world exists only in the mind of one perceiving subject is called ... solipsism

243. The advantages of empiricism as a universal method of scientific knowledge were defended by the English philosopher ... F. Bacon

244. Recognition of the existence of a single beginning of being is called ... monism

245. To accept one's fate as a manifestation of a good providence, to follow duty and virtue contrary to desires and passions is called upon by the ancient philosophical school of ... stoicism

246. The principle of verification was proposed by ... L. Wittgenstein

247. The principle of determining the significance of knowledge by its practical consequences was formulated in the philosophical school of ... pragmatism

248. The principles of dialectics as a universal method of cognition are ... the principle of objectivity, the principle of consistency

249. Problems related to the problem of resources, energy, food, environment are classified as _____________ problems. natural and social

250. Problems related to disarmament, prevention of thermonuclear war, world social and economic development are classified as ___ problems. intersocial

251. The process of emergence and development of man as a biological species is called ... anthropogenesis

252. Pseudo-scientific theory associated with attempts to obtain a perfect metal (gold, silver) from imperfect metals is called ... alchemy

253. A psychological attitude, consisting in the recognition of the unconditional existence and truth of something, is ... faith

254. The equality of all possible directions of space is called ... isotropy

255. Development is a process characterized by a change in ... quality

256. Development is a process characterized by change ... quality

257. The development of anthropological problems in medieval philosophy was associated, first of all, with the solution of the question of ... free will

258. The branch of philosophy that deals with the study of the problems of man, human existence, is called ... anthropology

259. The branch of philosophy that studies consciousness and cognition is called ... epistemology

260. The section of philosophy, which deals with questions about the essence of knowledge, about the ways of comprehending the truth, its foundations and criteria, is ... epistemology

261. The extension of the principles of materialistic dialectics to the explanation of the laws of animate and inanimate nature was carried out by ... F. Engels

262. Prevalence and general availability are signs of ______ culture. mass

263. Realization of the only possibility under certain conditions is called ... necessity

264. The real extent of the territory to which the historically conditioned political system extends or its political influence is exercised is called ... political space

265. The result of the process of cognition is ... knowledge

266. The results of specific sciences, incomplete knowledge about the subject are understood as _ truth. Relative

267. Religious worldview affirms as meaning human lifesoul salvation

268. The decisive role in the formation of man, according to the theory of anthroposociogenesis, was played by ... work

269. From the standpoint of dialectical materialism, the source of movement is ... contradiction

270. From the standpoint of creationism, the source of movement is ... God

271. From the standpoint of the German classical idealism the doctrine of the development of reality as a whole is called ... dialectics

272. From the point of view of the axiological approach, culture is ... a system of values

273. From the point of view of D. Bell, in a post-industrial society, specialists in ______________ sciences will become the main professional group. Technical

274. From the point of view of the activity approach, culture is ... way of human life

275. From the point of view of dialectical materialism, the main forms of truth are ... absolute and relative

276. From the point of view of J.-J. Rousseau, the individual, uncorrupted by the conventions and prejudices of culture, is called... natural person

277. From the point of view of L. Mumford, a strict hierarchical social organization, leading to an increase in the number wealth at the cost of limiting the possibilities and spheres of human activity, is called ... a megamachine

278. From the point of view of positivism, true knowledge must be confirmed by ... experience

279. From the point of view of the civilizational approach, the concepts of culture and civilization ... are opposed to each other

280. The property of truth, which implies the dependence of knowledge on connections and interactions, the place and time in which they exist and develop, is called ... concreteness

281. The system of historically developing suprabiological programs of human activity, behavior and communication, acting as a condition for the reproduction of social life, is called ... culture

282. The system of essential, from the point of view of a specific scientific research, properties and features of an object is called ... the subject of research

283. The system of philosophical views of K. Marx and F. Engels is called ... dialectical materialism

284. Consistency, validity, consistency are characteristic of __________ cognition. Scientific

285. Pantheism and materialism see the meaning of life in ... life itself, existence

286. The meaning of the historical development of society, according to P. Teilhard de Chardin, is ... the union of the souls of people in the cosmic Christ

287. The totality of internal, spiritual and intellectual qualities that embody the human ideal in its moral perfection is called ... virtue

288. The totality of all forms of existence of matter, the Universe in all its diversity are called ... the world

289. The totality of material, spiritual and artistic values ​​developed by mankind in the process of evolution is called ... culture

290. The totality of scientific research aimed at identifying the essence of global problems, problems affecting the interests of humanity as a whole and everyone individual person, and the search for ways to overcome them is called ... globalistics

291. The totality of stable connections of an object, which ensure the preservation of its basic properties during various external and internal changes, is called ... structure

292. A set of elements that are in relationships and connections with each other and form an integrity is called ... a system

293. Modern sociologists and philosophers to characterize specific traits modern society use the concept ... "mass society"

294. The modern Western philosopher J. Huizinga believes that the essential characteristic of a person is ... a game

295. According to the concept of V. S. Solovyov, an ideally perfect person is the highest manifestation of ... Sophia

296. According to the concept of C. G. Jung, the psychological type of a person, aimed primarily at his inner world, withdrawn, shy, called ... introvert

297. According to the concept of C. G. Jung, the psychological type of a person, aimed mainly at the outside world, sociable, active, is called ... an extrovert

298. According to the position of Aristotle, the possibility of being anything is called ... matter

299. According to the fundamental principle of Christian anthropology, each person is ... a person

300. The creative influence of philosophical principles and concepts on the formation of natural scientific theories shows the role of philosophy. constitutive

301. The social purpose of philosophy is to contribute to the solution of _ problems. worldview

302. A specific property of time is ... irreversibility

303. The method of definition and the method of philosophy is called ... reflection

304. The ability to comprehend the truth by direct observation of it without recourse to logical arguments is called ... intuition

305. The ability of a person to create images that were not previously perceived is called ... imagination

306. Medieval ideas about the creation of all living and non-living things by God are characterized as ... creationism

307. The medieval thinker who put forward the thesis of "harmony between faith and reason" was ... F. Aquinas

308. Standardization and unification of the production of cultural images are characteristic of ___________ culture. mass

309. The formation of anthropological problems in ancient philosophy is associated with the school of ... sophists

310. The formation of classical logic as a science is carried out in the work of the ancient Greek philosopher ... Aristotle

311. The clash of civilizations as a scenario for the near future of world history is described by the philosopher ... S. Huntington

312. A structural component of consciousness that performs a control function is ... will

313. The substratum-substantial concept considers matter as ... carrier of properties other than them

314. The subject, which is a unique spiritual and bodily integrity, the "author" of life, which determines its meaning and goals, is called ... personality

315. The essential definiteness of an object, thanks to which it exists precisely as such and not another object, is called ... quality

316. An essential feature of the development of Russian philosophy of the twentieth century is its split into ... Soviet and Russian foreign

317. An essential feature of the philosophy of the period of the Middle Ages becomes ... theocentrism

318. A significant difference between Antiquity and the subsequent stages of development of Western European philosophy is its ... syncretism

319. The existence of a person precedes his essence from the point of view ... J.-P. Sartre

320. Essence in its existence is called ... phenomenon

321. Essence Christian religion, from the point of view of L. Feuerbach, lies in the fact that ... a person creates God in his own image and likeness

322. The thesis "know thyself" becomes the leading one in the philosophy of ... Socrates

323. The epistemological position, according to which sensations are the only source and foundation of knowledge, is called ... sensationalism

324. The theoretical core of the worldview is ... philosophy

325. The theory that showed the dependence of space-time properties on the nature of the movement and interaction of material systems is called the theory of ... relativity

326. The course of Russian social and political thought in the 40s. XIX century, which advocated overcoming the historical backwardness of Russia from the countries of Western Europe, was called ... Westernism

327. The type of culture characterized by an organized consumer industry and a widely ramified network of means of communication is called ____________ culture. Bulk

328. The type of scientific rationality, which takes into account intersubjective relations between scientists, non-logical methods and procedures of cognitive activity, the social nature of scientific knowledge, is called ... post-non-classical

329. Accuracy and unambiguity are a characteristic feature of _____ knowledge. scientific

330. The labor concept of the origin of man was proposed by ... F. Engels

331. The universal properties of matter, expressing its systemic nature (unity and interconnection) are ... eternity of existence in time and infinity in space

332. Establish a correspondence between the types of knowledge and their specific properties. 1. Objectivity, rationality 2. Reflexivity, criticality 3. Authoritarianism, subordination to moral and ethical standards 4. Reliance on common sense, unwritten character 1 scientific knowledge 2 philosophical knowledge 3 religious knowledge 4 common knowledge

333. Establish a correspondence between the historical epoch and its characteristic understanding of the subject matter of philosophy. 1. Philosophy is "the servant of theology." 2. The main goal of philosophy is the search for a universal method of knowing the world. 3. The spreading of the light of reason is the main business of philosophy. 1 Middle Ages 2 Modern times 3 Enlightenment

334. Establish a correspondence between the thinker and the idea of ​​the essence of the world characteristic of his philosophy. 1. There are two worlds: the “world of ideas” and the “world of things”. Plato 2. The world consists of an infinite number of monads. G. Leibniz 3. God created the world out of nothing. Augustine 4. There are two kinds of substances: material and spiritual. R. Descartes

335. Establish a correspondence between different approaches to solving the problem of being and their characteristics: 1. All things and the whole world as a whole are understood as living organisms. 2. God and nature are identified. 3. Matter and spirit are two independent substances. 4. Everything in this world is material. 1 hylozoism 2 pantheism 3 dualism 4 materialism

336. Establish a correspondence between the type of worldview and its characteristics. 1. Studies the universal laws of the development of the world 2. Based on belief in the supernatural 3. Knowledge is reflected in the form artistic images 1 philosophy 2 religion 3 art

337. Establish a correspondence between philosophical trends and their ideas about the essence of the world. 1. Everything in the world has a material beginning. 2. The external world, reality exist only thanks to our consciousness, are the products of its activity. 3. Spirit and matter are two different and independent substances. 4. Both the external world and our consciousness are a product or manifestation of the highest principle, which has a spiritual nature. 1 materialism 2 subjective idealism 3 dualism 4 objective idealism

338. Arguing that "freedom is a conscious necessity", B. Spinoza takes the position ... determinism

339. A statement taken on faith without proof is called ... dogma

340. The statement that “in practice a person must prove the truth, that is, the reality and power, this-sideness of his thinking”, belongs to the philosopher ... K. Marx

341. The doctrine in epistemology, which denies the possibility of reliable knowledge of the essence of material systems, the laws of nature and society, is called ... agnosticism

342. The doctrine of the future in relation to historical and social time is called ... futurology

343. The doctrine of being is called... ontology

344. The doctrine of the natural (material) causality of all phenomena of the objective world is called ... determinism

345. The doctrine of the ideal state was created ancient Greek philosopher… Plato

346. The phenomenon of technology from the point of view of religious meaning was first considered by ... N. Berdyaev

347. Philosophy of science as a special philosophical direction has developed ... in the second half of the 19th century.

348. The philosophy of technology arises in (in) ... second half of the 19th century

349. Philosophy, being a breakthrough from the meaningless, empirical, forcing a person from all sides of the world to the world of meaning, performs a _______ function. humanistic

350. The philosopher who substantiated the ideal of life according to the principle "Man is God to man" was ... L. Feuerbach

351. The philosopher, who considered hostility to culture as an inborn property of a person, was ... Z. Freud

352. A philosopher who considered a person to be a “bundle or bundle of perceptions” was ... D. Hume

353. A philosopher who considered the essence of man to be the aggregate public relations, was ... K. Marx

354. The philosopher, who considered man as a transitional stage from the animal to the superman, was ... F. Nietzsche

355. A philosopher who believed that the world consists of single and indivisible atoms, different in size, was ... Democritus

356. The philosopher who claimed that being does not arise and does not disappear, that it is indivisible, whole, motionless and looks like a ball, was ... Parmenides

358. The philosophical position of P. Holbach, who asserted that “the Universe, this colossal combination of everything that exists, everywhere shows us only matter and motion”, can be characterized as ... materialism

359. The philosophical system of K. Marx can be defined as ... dialectical materialism

360. The philosophical direction, whose representatives consider understanding and interpretation as the main ways of cognition, is called ... hermeneutics

361. The philosophical trend that recognizes the substantiality of the unconscious is called ... irrationalism

362. Philosophical concept, serving for a generalized expression of the sphere of higher values ​​and obligation, is ... morality

363. Philosophical doctrine O final destinies the world and man is called ... eschatology

364. The philosophical doctrine of morality and morality is called ... ethics

365. A philosophical doctrine that denies the role of reason in cognition and highlights other types of human abilities - instinct, intuition, direct contemplation, insight, is called ... irrationalism

366. Philosophical doctrine, recognizing the presence of two independent and equal principles in the basis of the world, is called ... dualism

367. The philosophical doctrine, according to which there is knowledge acquired by a person before experience and independently of it, is called ... apriorism

368. The philosophical position of L. Feuerbach can be defined as ... anthropological materialism

369. The philosophers of the Renaissance solved the problem of the relationship between God and the world from the position ... Neoplatonism

370. Philosophers and scientists who participated in the creation of the "Encyclopedia, or explanatory dictionary sciences, arts and crafts”, united by the goal of spreading knowledge and promoting educational ideals, were called ... encyclopedists

371. The form of extra-scientific knowledge, which is characterized by mysticism and spiritualism, is ________ knowledge. parascientific

372. The form of rational cognition is... judgment

373. A form of sensory cognition is… sensation

374. Fundamental physical theory created at the beginning of the 20th century. to explain micromovements, which underlies the modern scientific picture of the world, is called ... quantum mechanics

375. The function of philosophy, which involves the search and finding answers to the main questions of being, is called ... worldview

376. The function of philosophy, revealing the laws of the thought process and knowledge of the world, is called ... epistemological

377. The function of philosophy, which is realized in highlighting and taking into account the complex nature of the connections between the method and the object of knowledge in science, is called ... coordinating

378. The function of philosophy, which is realized in the formation of an integral system of knowledge, is called ... integrating

379. The function of philosophy, which is realized in an extremely attentive attitude towards a person, is called ... humanistic

380. The function of philosophy associated with the explanation of not only the past and present, but also the future is called ... prognostic

381. The function of philosophy associated with the development of the most general principles and ways of scientific knowledge of the world, is called ... methodological

382. The function of philosophy, associated with the formation of philosophical thinking, the transfer of experience of social life, supranatural programs of behavior and communication, is called ... cultural and educational

383. The function of philosophy, which consists in promoting the growth of scientific knowledge, including the creation of prerequisites for scientific discoveries, is called ... heuristic

384. The function of philosophy, closely connected with the problem of substantiating values ​​for a person and society, is called ... socio-axiological.

385. The close attention to the problems of the development and meaning of the world and national history commonly called... historiosophical

386. characteristic feature scientific knowledge is... rationality

387. Characteristic for the scientific picture of the world are the principles ... objectivity and materiality of the world

388. Christian ideas about history are presented in the work of Augustine Aurelius ... "On the City of God"

389. Artistic creativity as a special form of social consciousness, a kind of spiritual assimilation of reality is called ... art

390. Values ​​associated with the spiritual sphere of the life of society, which largely determine the way of life of a person, are called ... ideological

391. Values ​​containing social institutions, prohibitions, goals and projects, expressed in the form of normative ideas (about goodness, justice, etc.), are called ... subjective

392. The central concept of the philosophy of V. I. Vernadsky is ... the noosphere

393. A sensory-visual image of objects and phenomena of reality, preserved and reproduced in the mind without affecting the objects themselves on the senses, is called ... representation

394. E. Toffler develops the concept of ... "electronic cottage"

395. Existentialism focuses attention, first of all, on the problem ... existence

396. Electromagnetic interactions are a _______ form of movement. Physical

397. The ethical conception of Epicurus may be designated by the term "__________". eudemonism

398. Yu. A. Lotman developed an ____________ approach to the consideration of culture. Semiotic

399. The core of the political sphere of society is (are) ... state

400. The brightest representative of agnosticism is ... I. Kant

401. The thinker becomes an ardent opponent of Russian revolutionary radicalism ... F. M. Dostoevsky

The field of knowledge in which the regularities of the “second nature” are described and studied is called ___________ sciences.

technical

The empirical method of cognition, during the application of which knowledge is obtained about the external aspects and properties of the object in question, is called ...

observation

TASK N 3 report an error

Topic: Development of science

Establish a correspondence between scientific events and the main stages in the development of science.

1. Creation of scientific laboratories

2. Research by G. Galileo

3. Scientific and technological revolution

4. Creation by A. Einstein of the theory of relativity

1 XVIII - XIX centuries.

2 16th – 17th centuries

3 second half of the 20th century

4 first half of the 20th century

TASK N 4 report an error

Topic: Scientific and non-scientific knowledge

The main concepts of the origin of life on Earth are…

panspermia

abiogenesis

Solution: The main concepts of the origin of life on Earth are panspermia and abiogenesis. According to the concept of panspermia, life on Earth was brought from space. Classic concept panspermia was developed by the German physicist G. Helmholtz and the Swedish scientist S. Arrhenius, who suggested that life spreads in the Universe with the help of comets that contain elements of living matter (water, organic matter, microorganisms).

From the point of view of abiogenesis, life arises spontaneously, from inanimate nature. The modern concept of abiogenesis distinguishes three stages of prebiological evolution: 1) the stage of synthesis of the simplest organic compounds; 2) the stage of polymerization, at which precursors of living cells arise; 3) the biochemical stage at which the genetic code arises and the transition to biological evolution takes place.

TASK N 5 report an error

Topic: Man and culture

The approach according to which culture is a system of non-biological programs of human practice is called ...

active

The approach according to which culture is a system of non-biological programs of human practice is called activity approach. As a way of regulating, preserving and developing society, culture includes not only spiritual, but also objective activity.

TASK N 6 report an error

Topic: The origin and essence of man

The saying "Man is the measure of all things: those that exist in that they exist, and those that do not exist in that they do not exist" belongs to ...

Protagoras

TASK N 7 report an error

Topic: Values ​​and meaning of human life

The concept of "value" appears in the writings of...

TASK N 8 report an error

Theme: Man, individual, personality

The concept according to which a person is considered as the highest value, the meaning of earthly civilization, is called ...

personalism

TASK N 9 report an error

Topic: Global problems and the future of mankind

An international public organization engaged in the scientific study of global problems is called the ___________ club.

TASK N 10 report an error

Topic: The structure of society

Match between historical types social stratification and the degree of "openness" of society:

1. Closed society

2. Open society

3. Conditionally open society

1 caste system

2 class society

3 class society

TASK N 11 report an error

2. Spirit reaches full bloom and maturity

3. "The realm of beautiful freedom"

4. Aristocracy as a form of government

1 Eastern world

2 German peace

3 Greek world

4 Roman peace

In accordance with geography, G. Hegel divides history into the Eastern world, Greek, Roman and German.

Eastern world - childhood stories. Here despotism reigns and only the despot feels free. People revolve around one center, that is, the ruler, who is at the head of the state as a patriarch. It requires all citizens to comply with the relevant regulations.

The Greek world is the youthful period of world history, when individuals are formed. Here, according to G. Hegel, the real freedom of the individual, true harmony, peace and concord reign. The individual will of the subject adheres to customs, habits, generally accepted norms and laws.

The Roman world is the age of manhood of history. In Rome, abstract freedom dominates, putting the state and politics above any individuality, but at the same time a free personality is created that differs from individuality. The predominant form of government is the aristocracy. The aristocracy fights the kings, the plebeians fight the aristocracy.

The German world is the fourth period of history. The German people, according to G. Hegel, are called upon to preserve the Christian principles of spiritual freedom and reconciliation. The spirit in the German world reaches its full flowering and maturity. The Prussian monarchy seems to be the crown and pinnacle of the development of world history.

TASK N 12 report an error

Theme: Society and history

The thinker who considers the scientific and technological potential as the main indicator of historical development is ...

TASK N 13 report an error

Theme: Pictures of the world

Establish a correspondence between the main models of the world and the philosophers who were characterized by these representations:

1. Atomic model of the world

2. Pluralistic model of the world

3. Naturalistic model

4. Religious model

1 Democritus

2 G. Leibniz

TASK N 14 report an error

Topic: The subject of philosophy

A European thinker who believed that “essentially speaking, all philosophy is only human reason in a vague language” was ...

Goethe Solution: The European thinker who believed that “essentially speaking, all philosophy is only human reason in a vague language” was Goethe. JW Goethe is a German poet and naturalist. His views are anti-philosophical in nature.

TASK N 15 report an error

Topic: Functions of Philosophy

The function of philosophy, closely related to the problem of substantiating values ​​for a person and society, is called ...

socio-axiological

TASK N 16 report an error

Topic: The structure of philosophy

The science of the forms and methods of rational thinking is ...

TASK N 17 report an error

Topic: Philosophy of the New Age

According to Descartes, the criterion for the truth of scientific knowledge is the correct ...

dededuction

TASK N 18 report an error

Topic: German classical philosophy

The rethinking of the idealistic dialectics of G. Hegel from the position of materialism was carried out ...

K. Marx

TASK N 19 report an error

Topic: Domestic philosophy

Representatives of Russian religious philosophy of the 20th century include ...

S. L. Frank

L. P. Karsavin

S. N. Bulgakov

N. A. Berdyaev

TASK N 20 report an error

Topic: Philosophy of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance

The defense of Christian truths against criticism from the late ancient schools was called ...

apologetics

TASK N 21 report an error

Subject: ancient philosophy

Socratic schools include the school ...

TASK N 22 report an error

Topic: Modern philosophy of the West

According to J.-P. Sartre, the specificity of human existence lies in the fact that ...

existence precedes essence

TASK N 23 report an error

Topic: Concepts of being

The idea that the world exists only in the mind of one perceiving subject is called ...

solipsism

TASK N 24 report an error

Theme: Movement, space, time

The real extent of the territory to which the historically conditioned political system extends or its political influence is exercised is called ...

political space

TASK N 25 report an error

Topic: Dialectics of Being

The direction of development from the lowest to the highest is called...

progress

TASK N 26 report an error

Topic: Consistency of being

The substratum-substantial concept considers matter as ...

carrier of properties other than them

TASK N 27 report an error

Topic: Human cognitive abilities

Consistency, validity, consistency are characteristic of __________ cognition.

scientific

TASK N 28 report an error

Topic: Consciousness and Cognition

Along with scientific knowledge, one can distinguish ...

ordinary religious

TASK N 29 report an error

Subject: The Problem of Truth

"Truth is an agreement," the representatives of...

conventionalism

TASK N 30 report an error

Topic: Essence and nature of knowledge

The epistemological position, according to which sensations are the only source and basis of knowledge, is called ...

sensationalism

TASK N 1 report an error

Topic: The structure of society

Establish a correspondence between social phenomena and spheres of society.

1. Adoption of antitrust laws

2. Furniture production

3. Formation of the working class

1 political sphere

2 economic sphere

3 social sphere

TASK N 2 report an error

Theme: Culture, civilization, formations

Establish a correspondence between the worlds identified by G. Hegel in history and their features.

1. Despotic forms of government

a) universalism and individualism;

b) cosmocentrism and theocentrism;

c) materialism and idealism;

d) Stoicism and Epicureanism.

4. A characteristic feature of German classical philosophy is ...

a) theocentrism;

b) materialism;

c) anthroposociocentrism;

d) irrationalism.

5. To the main features of the irrationalist trend in modern Western philosophy applies...

a) critical discussion of any issue;

b) skeptical attitude towards scientific achievements;

c) checking the truth of knowledge;

d) recognition of the value of scientific knowledge.

6. A. Camus considers the most important essential characteristic of being ...

7. The criterion of the truth of knowledge, from the point of view of R. Descartes' rationalism, is ...

a) clarity, clarity;

b) practical feasibility;

c) validity of logical conclusions;

d) reliability of experience.

8. J. Deleuze is a representative of the philosophy ...

a) Marxism;

b) postmodernism;

c) existentialism;

d) neo-Thomism.

9. The focus of ancient Greek natural philosophy is the question of (about) ...

a) the essence of a person;

b) the relationship between nature and society;

c) in the beginning;

d) the relationship between God and the world.

10. In the philosophy of the Enlightenment, the highest historical value of mankind is considered ...

a) art;

b) a strong state;

c) individual will;

d) progress.

11. In the philosophical system of G. Hegel, the central concept that guides and implements the process of development of all things is ...

b) a person;

c) an absolute idea;

d) absolute matter.

12. The ancient school called for refraining from judgments...

a) cynicism;

b) skepticism;

c) neoplatonism;

d) stoicism.

13. L. Feuerbach sees the main obstacle to happiness in ...

a) the sensual nature of man;

b) mind thinking "I";

c) alienation of human essence;

d) natural necessity.

14. Materialistic dialectics was developed and substantiated...

a) G. Hegel;

b) V. Solovyov;

c) F. Nietzsche;

d) F. Engels.

a) scholastics;

b) reformation;

c) patristics;

d) Averroism.

16. The concept of "intentionality" is characteristic of the philosophical direction ...

a) existentialism;

b) phenomenology;

c) structuralism;

d) Freudianism.

17. As a truly scientific method of cognition, F. Bacon claims ...

a) transfer;

b) induction;

18. The founder of psychoanalytic philosophy is ...

a) F. Nietzsche;

b) Z. Freud;

c) E. Fromm;

d) L. Feuerbach.

19. Realism and nominalism - directions in medieval scholasticism that solve the problem ...

a) the relationship between faith and reason;

b) the relationship between God and the world;

c) universals;

d) the purpose and meaning of history.

20. The philosophers of the Renaissance solved the problem of the relationship between God and the world from the position ...

a) deism;

b) Neoplatonism;

c) rationalism;

d) scholastics.

21. I. Kant sees the positive content of metaphysical ideas in the fact that they are ...

a) a priori forms of thinking;

b) a posteriori data;

c) objects of theoretical reason;

d) objects of practical reason.

22. In the tradition of German classical philosophy, the system of subjective idealism was created...

a) K. Jaspers;

b) G. Hegel;

c) D. Hume;

d) I. Fichte.

23. Defending the idea of ​​​​a special status of the head of state, standing outside the system of philistine morality, N. Machiavelli becomes the founder of such a socio-political trend as ...

a) plutocracy;

d) comparative political science.

24. Ontology as a doctrine of being is born in philosophy...

a) Plato

b) Heraclitus;

c) Parmenides;

d) Pythagoras.

25. The philosophical direction, whose representatives consider understanding and interpretation as the main ways of knowing, is called ...

a) dialectics;

b) nominalism;

c) hermeneutics;

d) empiricism.

26. The philosophical position of L. Feuerbach can be defined as...

b) vulgar materialism;

c) subjective idealism;

d) anthropological materialism.

27. Zeno of Elea, in his aporias, raised the problem...

a) existence and non-existence;

b) a priori knowledge;

c) logical contradictions;

d) freedom and necessity.

28. Representatives of philosophical neorealism include ...

a) E. Husserl;

b) B. Russell;

d) A. Schopenhauer.

29. The ideological movement of the Renaissance, upholding respect for the dignity and rights of man, his value as a person, is called ...

a) humanism;

b) anthropodices;

c) secularization;

d) liberalism.

30. The opposition of materialism and idealism in ancient Greek philosophy is represented by the teachings ...

a) Heraclitus and Pythagoras;

b) Plato and Aristotle;

c) Democritus and Plato;

d) Democritus and Epicurus.

31. The central problem in the philosophy of modern times is ...

a) proof of the absence of a center in the universe;

b) the dialectic of absolute and relative truth;

c) development of the scientific method;

d) the question of the relationship between faith and reason.

32. A sufficient condition for moral action, according to Socrates, is ...

a) renunciation of sensual pleasures;

b) knowledge of the nature of things;

c) striving for a goal;

d) knowledge of the good.

33. From the point of view of Thomas Aquinas, faith and reason are in a state of ...

a) dialogue

b) harmony;

c) neutrality;

d) enmity.

34. The founder of positivism in philosophy is ...

a) I. Kant;

b) W. Dilthey;

c) O. Comte;

d) M. Heidegger.

35. Establish a correspondence between the model of the world and the philosopher in whose work this model was embodied.

Section 3. History of Russian Philosophy

1. "Pre-philosophies" Kievan Rus characteristic...

a) the priority of natural philosophical constructions;

b) mysticism;

c) moralizing character;

d) substantiation of the exclusivity of the Russian people.

2. Properties of Good, according to opinion, are not ...

b) cleanliness;

c) self-legality;

d) rationality.

3. "The Word of Law and Grace" was written by ...

a) Daniil Zatochnik;

b) Philotheus;

c) Vladimir Monomakh;

d) Hilarion.

4. The ideologeme "Moscow - the Third Rome" was first substantiated by ...

a) Philotheus;

b) Vladimir Monomakh;

c) Dionysius;

d) Sergius of Radonezh.

5. A supporter of deistic materialism in Russian philosophy was ...

6. "Russian Socrates" was nicknamed ...

b) Daniil Zatochnik;

d) Stefan Yavorsky.

7. The work “On Man, on His Mortality and Immortality”, which is one of the first philosophical and anthropological works in the history of Russian philosophy, was written ...

c) Daniil Zatochnik;

8. Russian philosophers of the 19th century include ... (

9. The question of the role and place of Russia in the history of mankind was raised in the "Philosophical Letters" ...

10. The ideological head of the Slavophiles was ...

11. The term "sobornost" in the philosophy of the Slavophils means ...

a) the communal structure of society in the absence of state power;

b) the priority of the collective over the individual;

c) free unity of people in Christ;

d) the salvation of all believers.

12. The central concept of philosophy is ...

a) mini-system;

b) civilization;

c) noosphere;

14. The philosophers who developed the theme of love in Russian philosophy include ... ( more than one answer is possible)

15. Representatives of Russian cosmism are ... ( more than one answer is possible)

b) K. Jaspers:

d) O. Spengler.

17. Representatives of the materialistic trend in Russian philosophy are ... ( more than one answer is possible)

a) Pavel Florensky;

b) Vladimir Solovyov;

c) Alexey Losev;

d) Nikolai Berdyaev.

19. The course of Russian social and political thought in the 40s. XIX century, which advocated overcoming the historical backwardness of Russia from the countries of Western Europe, was called ...

b) radicalism;

c) Westernism;

d) historicism.

20. The ethical position can be characterized as ethics...

a) resistance to evil by force;

b) lesser evil;

c) benefits;

d) non-violence.

21. One of the specific features of the Russian philosophical tradition is...

The immediate forerunner of existentialism is the Danish philosopher...

S. Kierkegaard

The need to defend the consistency of religious truths in the context of the dominant scientific picture of the world becomes a prerequisite for the formation of a philosophical school...

Neo-Thomism

The founder of phenomenology is the philosopher ...

E. Husserl

The principle of determining the significance of knowledge by its practical consequences was formulated in the philosophical school ...

pragmatism

The relationship of the problem of truth with the analysis of the logical structure of language is the subject of research in the philosophical school ...

neopositivism

In the philosophy of postmodernism, the concept of "simulacrum" was introduced, denoting ...

copy of non-existent original


A. Camus considers the most important essential characteristic of being ...

J. Deleuze is a representative of the philosophy of ... Postmodernism

One of the most prominent representatives of the "philosophy of life" is ...

The spiritual value of the human personality in the context of the realities of the twentieth century is defended by the religious-idealistic trend ...

personalism

The clash of civilizations as a scenario for the near future of world history describes

S. Huntington

The priority of unconscious processes in the behavior and essence of a person is defended by the philosopher ...

The representative of the hermeneutic tradition in philosophy is ...

V. Dilthey

"The whole world is a text," says the philosophical school...

hermeneutics

Analysis of the dynamics of scientific knowledge becomes one of the central problems in the philosophical school...

post-positivism

Existentialism focuses primarily on the problem...

existence

According to J.-P. Sartre, the specificity of human existence lies in the fact that ...

existence precedes essence

Topic: Domestic philosophy

The philosophers who developed the theme of love in Russian philosophy include ...

V. V. Rozanov S. L. Frank

Russian philosophers of the 19th century include ...

N. G. Chernyshevsky V. S. Soloviev A. I. Herzen P. Ya. Chaadaev

The properties of Good, according to V.S. Solovyov, are ...

Purity Self-Legitimacy Effectiveness

The formation of "pre-philosophy" in Russia was influenced by ...

non-possessiveness

approval of the ideologeme "Moscow - the third Rome"

Russian split Orthodox Church

Representatives of the materialistic direction in Russian philosophy are ...

G. V. Plekhanov D. I. Pisarev M. A. Bakunin

Representatives of Russian religious philosophy of the 20th century include ...

S. L. Frank L. P. Karsavin S. N. Bulgakov N. A. Berdyaev

Representatives of Russian cosmism are ...

N. F. Fedorov K. E. Tsiolkovsky V.I. Vernadsky

Topic: Dialectics of Being

The essential determinateness of an object, due to which it exists precisely as such and not another object, is called ...

quality

The driving force of any development, according to dialectics, is ...

contradiction

Changing an object under the influence of its inherent contradictions, factors and conditions is called

self-propulsion

The internal content of an object, expressed in the stable unity of all the diverse and contradictory properties of being, is called ...

essence

An important characteristic of development is ...

irreversibility of changes

The measure of opportunity is called...

probability

The basic laws of dialectics were formulated ...

G. Hegel

Dialectics appeared as an opposition...

Metaphysics

A new stage of development in dialectics is called ...

synthesis

From the standpoint of dialectical materialism, the source of movement is ...

contradiction

The direction of development from the lowest to the highest is called...

Progress

The realization of a single possibility under certain conditions is called ...

Necessity

The system of philosophical views of K. Marx and F. Engels is called ...

dialectical materialism

A state alternative to stability, a transition from one state to another, is called ...

change

The process of development, due to certain determining factors and subject to certain laws, is called ...

evolution

The materialist dialectic was developed and substantiated...

F. Engels

The main principles of dialectics, from the standpoint of dialectical materialism, are ...

universal communication and development

Directed, irreversible qualitative changes in the system are called ...

development

Topic: Concepts of being

In medieval philosophy, the source and the highest form of being was considered (-as, -axis) ...

The direction in philosophy, proceeding from the primacy of spiritual, mental, mental and the secondary nature of material, natural, physical being, is called ...

idealism

The doctrine of being is called...

ontology

The totality of all forms of existence of matter, the Universe in all its diversity are called ...

The potential form of being is called...

opportunity

The position according to which the world in relation to a person has two hypostases - will and representation, belongs to ...

M. Heidegger

The idea that being is formed as a unity of matter and form belongs to ...

Aristotle

The existence of a certain class of natural objects (microorganisms, plants and animals, including humans) is called ...

The position according to which there are two worlds - the noumenal ("things in themselves") and the phenomenal (representations of things), belongs to ...

Existentialism sees existence as...

human existence

The transformed form of being is called...

otherness

Dialectical-materialistic ontology refuses the concept of "______ being".

The essence in its existence is called...

Phenomenon

The equivalence of being and non-being, expressed in the acceptance of the two principles of everything that exists - atoms and emptiness, postulates ...

Democritus

The idea that the world exists only in the mind of one perceiving subject is called ...

solipsism

The doctrine of being is called...

ontology

The world of physical states is called...

material existence

According to M. Heidegger, _________ is the house of being.


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