PHILOSOPHY 110 C – Final
Examination
!!Write ONLY on paper
supplied by instructor!!
NAME: __________________ Wednesday, May 4, 2005
Room 2-14 DISCUSS!! 2:30
– 4:45 PM
Section I:
Identify any TEN out of fifteen people: Buddha, Alfred North Whitehead, Martin
Luther King Jr., Epicurus, Confucius, Gaunilo, Anselm of Canterbury, Blaise
Pascal, Carol Gilligan, Lawrence Kohlberg, Confucius, Pablo Picasso, Simone de
Beauvoir, e.e.cummings, Ali, Ann Ferguson, Claude Levi-Strauss, Kate Millet,
Mohammed, Nancy Chodorow, Malcolm X, Rabi’a al-Awadiyya, Mulla Sadra, Lao-Tze
or Tzu.
Section II: Identify any FIVE out
of ten concepts: Hinduism, Deism, Theism, Sufi, Leap of Faith,
Sunni, pantheism, Zen Buddhism, Closure, Shiite, Animism, mysticism, satori,
dharma, Buddhism, mukti, catharsis, Tao, Zen
Buddhism, Karma, androgyny, atman, nirvana, koan.
Section III: Answer YOUR question
and any FOUR of the next ten for 60 per cent of the grade:
1.
Discuss Aristotle's
theory of Art.
Aristotle
said that the characteristic of art is that
when we experience it, it gives us what he called “catharsis.” This word means in Greek ‘cleansing,’ but
people generally assume that he meant ‘relief:’ when we experience art it makes
us feel relieved and less tense and there is a sense that a burden has been
taken off us. Aristotle
hence thought that we use art to solve our problems: when we are unhappy, we
can use art to feel happy again. He sides with Freud in
thinking that art is useful: it provides a relief. Kant, on the other hand,
thought art was a kind of doodling: making meaningless scrabbles on a piece of
paper.
How does art provide relief? Aristotle
proposes that when we see art that appeals to us, we recognize our problems.
When we see a play about Medea dismembering her kids and throwing them
overboard we recognize what we feel when the neighbor’s kids mess up our
beautiful garden: we would like to strangle them and that of course is a
problem: if we strangle them we go to jail,
and if we don’t strangle them we develop a stomach ulcer, a headache, or we
kick our dog. And when we see that on
stage or in a movie, it is not our problem anymore: it is someone else’s
problem and we can look at it from an objective point of view. Our oldest son had learning disabilities and
the school psychologist organized a parents’ group where we tutored other
children with learning disabilities.
Then, so to say, we could have our pie and eat it: our child’s learning disabilities
were not our problem anymore but someone else’s. At the same time, however, we were working at
the problem so we didn’t feel guilty and we developed an understanding of the
problem. Often, when confronted with a
difficult problem, we tense up and that keeps us from solving it. When we see our problems in art, Aristotle
says, we loosen up because it isn’t our problem anymore and when we are
relaxed, we can solve it better. Still,
we are working at the problem, which now is someone else’s: it is Medea’s, for
example.
2.
Explain why
Modern Art is Art.
We
can look upon works of art as a language: in a language we have words that can
be put together or combined with other words, but only according certain rules.
When we put ‘anyone’ with ‘lived,’ we run into a rule that says that ‘everyone’
can be combined with ‘lived’ but ‘anyone’ can not be combined with
‘lived.’ Similarly in art we find that
‘Jesus’ can be combined with ‘is crucified’ or ‘is our shepherd’ but not with
‘kills a soldier’ or ‘is the Jewish High Priest.’ This is especially true of art in the middle
Ages: the paintings there are very predictable and there is not much variation.
With time, however, we find more subject and less rules. In Medieval Art, for example, we find almost
only Biblical figures that are combined with each other only in ways described
in the Bible but in 19th century art we find many more people that
are combined in ways not described in the Bible. We find, for example, people traveling in a
railroad, rowing on a river, dissecting a corpse in a medical school. In short, with time the rules for combining
the figures relax and there are more figures.
But the rules and figures still stay within the possibilities of this
world. In our world a face has two eyes when you look at it from the front and
one eye when we look at it from the side.
Till World War I: then most of the rules disappear and we see a face
from the side with two eyes.
So, in modern art most of the restrictive rules
on art disappear, and those are the restrictive rules of reality. Reality tells us that eyes, mouth, and nose
occur in a face in certain relationships: two eyes, below them a mouth, a nose
between the eyes and the mouth. Modern
art puts the eyes, nose and mouth wherever the artist wants.
Why does Modern Art dispose with the rules
of reality? For better expression. In our language there is a rule that says
you can combine ‘everybody’ with ‘lived’ but you cannot say ‘anybody
lived.’ But the poet e.e. cummings
decides to ignore that rule. His poem is
about the average person, called ‘everyman’ in medieval plays, and how he
lived. But he makes the poem more
personal by using ‘anyone’ instead of ‘everyone’ or ‘everybody.’ ‘Anyone’ means
‘everyone’ but with the invitation to the listener to pick anyone, check
whether the poet is right and then the listener will see that what the poet
says is correct. Hence the poem begins
something like: “Once upon a time an average person lived…” and then the poet
uses the word “anyone” to tell the audience: “What I say is true, pick anyone,
and you’ll see that he lived in a nice town …” The word “anyone” is not
grammatical but more expressive since it contains
the meaning: “pick anyone.” Entropy increases.
3.
Discuss the Ontological Argument for the
existence of God. What was Kant's opinion of such proofs?
This argument, first formulated by Anselm of Canterbury,
runs as follows:
Premise 1: I can think of something that is more perfect
than anything else, and I call that: ‘God.’ So, premise 1 states: God is
perfect. (S)He may or may not exist; for the time being (S)He exists only in my
mind. But (S)He is perfect.
Premise 2: Whatever is perfect, has to exist, otherwise
it would not be perfect.
Conclusion: God is perfect (from premise 1) and therefore
exists (from premise 2).
Objections:
1) perfect things do not HAVE to
exist. Some things can be “too good to
be true." Ideals don't have to exist, except in people's mind. Also:
2) whatever is most perfect, does
not have to be perfect (the reverse
of the Dinner Plate or Brussels Sprouts Argument), just like whatever is best
in certain situations is the lesser evil and does not have to be good.
Additionally,
3) can something be 'more perfect' than
something else? An object or person is either perfect or not, just as a person
is dead or alive. People may be 'closer to perfection,' but that does not make
them 'more perfect.' And lastly:
4) Kant's
formulation: perfection is a predicate, but existence is not.
This means that a predicate, for
example "… is perfect," tells us something new or important about
something's make-up or composition. For
example, when I tell you: “your neighbor (the subject) is nice (the
predicate),” I am adding to the description of your neighbor something you did
not know or did not realize. But saying:
“your neighbor exists” does not change anything in the description of the
neighbor: (s)he is a skinny Eskimo who loves raw fish, throws wild fish parties
and smells like fish, whether (s)he exists or I am merely imagining her or him.
Now, an existing wild neighbor is a nuisance, but (s)he is so because (s)he is
wild, because she does something to us. This is like, for example, a knife or a
gun. They are not evil in themselves but
can be used as tools to hurt us. If existing made the neighbor a nuisance, then
all existing neighbors would be nuisances.
But they are not; some are and others aren’t, depending on whether they
throw wild fish parties or not.
In an argument we work with
predicates—qualities that add something new or overlooked to the
description--and 'exists' is not a predicate, and therefore does not fit in the
argument. In premise 2 Anselm mixes apples and oranges: saying
that "whoever is perfect, exists" is like talking about apples and
then switch to oranges and pretend that we are still talking about the same
thing. This is like saying: 1) Des Moines
is in Iowa, 2) Iowa
is a battleship, therefore: Des Moines
is in a battleship. This argument is not
valid because we changed categories: we started out with geographical units and
then changed to ships, and you can’t change categories in an argument; you have
to stay in the same category.
Of course premise 2 has psychological,
though not logical, packing power. A hundred dollars may be the same as any
other hundred dollars, but a hundred dollars we have is better than a hundred
dollars we don't have. Or, an existing
hundred dollars is preferable to a non-existing hundred dollars, but that is
because of the existing, not because of the hundred dollars. And Anselm is saying that
an existing hundred-dollar bill is not just preferable to a non-existing one,
he says it is qualitatively different. And that is logically not defensible.
Kant said
that looking for a proof for God's existence was pointless: we need God to make
sense out of life; God's existence is a moral necessity.
4.
Discuss Marx' explanation of
Religion.
Marx
had concluded that all our spiritual activity originates from the economic
structure of our society and that, for example, in a capitalist economy people
would have capitalist spiritual life and, especially, a capitalist religion
that condoned injustice by promising rewards for injustice in the Afterlife. Capitalists exploit people, Marx
said, and they use religion to justify
exploitation and keep the exploited happy with promises. This is only partly supported by facts: many
religions stress the need for justice for the poor and the exploited and a
justice here on earth, not in the Afterlife. The fact that some people misuse
religion tells us something about those people, not about religion.
5.
Explain and
discuss Pascal’s “Wager” or “Bet”.
Pascal
reasoned that if one believed in God, one would be rewarded if (S)He existed,
and if (S)He did not exist, one would have lived soberly and honestly for no
religious reason but that would not be much of a loss, since it would have been
a healthy life all the same. If one did
not believe in God, one would go to Hell if God existed and one would live
merely a short and unhealthy life of evil if (S)He did not exist. It would therefore be safer to assume God
existed, because we would thereby avoid going to Hell, and if God did not
exist, the healthy and lawful life would be a reward in itself.
There is no problem if there is only one God, but how do
we know that? If there are many Gods, then the problem is: in which God do we
have to believe to avoid Hell? Can we play it safe and believe in all
Gods? What if Gods have contradictory
commands: sacrifice your oldest child (the Phoenician God Baal in the Old
Testament) or don't sacrifice anyone (Yahweh)?
6.
Which natural disaster triggered the discussion of
the existence of Evil? Why is the existence of Evil a problem?
In
1755 an earthquake destroyed the Portuguese capital Lisbon
on the morning of Easter Sunday, when most God-fearing people were in church
and all the bums were in bars. The churches collapsed and killed all
worshippers while bums crawled out of the bars alive. This had an enormous impact in Europe
since it seemed as if God had inflicted punishment on people who did not seem
to deserve it. Previously people had
noticed that good people suffer: the Old Testament Book of Job is about the
suffering of a good person: Job. But the
Lisbon earthquake was the first
time that good people died on a large scale, and also the first time everybody
in Europe could read about it in the newspapers. It also happened during a time when the
natural sciences were flourishing, and when people started noticing
cause-and-result relations everywhere, especially in the sciences. Newton had presented a model of a universe where
everything—for example, a solar eclipse--has a cause and is predictable
centuries before it would happen, and consequently people assumed that the
earthquake must have had a cause, and they started to ask what the causes or
cause was for this and for other examples of undeserved suffering. So, after Newton
people started to assume that everything had a cause, and that the result was
predictable from, and in agreement with, the cause. Or, that serious transgressions would result
in serious disasters and light transgressions in light disasters. But people
saw something completely different: life was unpredictable—just think of the
stock market and the economy—and punishment or rewards were not in proportion
with their causes: people who went to church on Easter morning where punished
by being crushed in church; people who got drunk on Easter morning just were
frightened but otherwise survived. Evil is when people suffer for no good
reason; evil is when it seems as if there is something or somebody who makes us
suffer just because something or somebody enjoys making us suffer. How come there is undeserved suffering? That is the problem of Evil.
7.
Discuss Pantheism and explain
why the Abrahamic religions reject it in Spinoza’s
formulation.
The
Abrahamic religions--Islam, Judaism and
Christianity--focus on a contradiction in our religious experience, which makes
us realize that God is immanent but also transcendent. God is immanent means
that God is a part of this world: we feel that at certain
moments God is with us. That agrees with
Spinoza's pantheism.
But we also feel that God is better that the world and not part of it,
and that is the meaning of transcendent.
In our world, for example, meaningless earthquakes kill thousands of
innocent people but we believe that that is not God, since God is outside our
world and better. Spinoza's
pantheism would equate God with the universe, and in the universe senseless
events occur which we do not want to ascribe to God. There is much evil in the world, and
identifying God with the universe would mean identifying Him or Her with that
evil. Spinoza denies that God is transcendent, and the
Abrahamic religions assume (S)He is transcendent indeed so that (S)He is not
blamed for the evil that is in our world.
Additionally: Abrahamic scholars believe that
God created the universe and therefore must have existed before there was a
universe. Spinoza
assumed that God and the universe were the same, and in that case God could not
have created the universe.
8.
Discuss Augustine’s argument against
the existence of Evil. Which philosopher provided the basis for this argument?
Augustine
took an idea of the Greek philosopher Parmenides, who claimed
that whatever really exists, exists forever. All that exists only for some time, even a
few centuries, does not really exist, said
Parmenides. This made him conclude that actually very few
things existed, since most things disappear sooner or later. The only things that really existed, Parmenides
thought, were mathematical formulas.
Augustine decided that Parmenides
had a good argument, even though Parmenides was a pagan Greek
philosopher. So Augustine reasoned that Evil does not exist
forever. For example, in Paradise,
right after the creation of the world, there was no Evil. Also, when Christ returns to
earth and the Thousand-Year Kingdom
will begin, there will be no Evil either. So, Augustine claimed,
Evil does not last, therefore it does not exist. The problem is, of course, that nobody
ascribes to Parmenides' philosophy anymore. Additionally, it
is of no help to someone who is tortured by the Des Moines Mafia to know that
the evil done to him doesn't exist. The pain
that is caused by Evil results in an internal sense proposition—e.g. “I suffer
terribly!--which shows that Evil does indeed exist and claiming
that it does not exist is wishful thinking.
9.
Discuss Kierkegaard's attitude
toward religion. Is religion rational? Does it matter? What is the importance of religion, according
to Kierkegaard?
Kierkegaard
thought that we create our own personality by our commitments. These
commitments can be to varying items: a sports team, a job, our family, and our
'significant other.' When we declare that those items are for us most
important, we identify ourselves as a Green Sox fan, or Pat's
spouse, child, or employee. But sports,
jobs and people have only a limited range, and our commitment to them creates
only a part of our personality. God,
however, has an unlimited range and covers all of creation, and by committing
ourselves to God we create our maximal and total personality.
This commitment is not rational, Kierkegaard
said. If it were rational, everybody would
figure out which one God to believe in, and there would be no risk in our faith. If faith in
God were rational, we would figure out on our adding machines whom to believe
in, and then we would be like machines that blindly follow instructions or
animals that follow instincts. What
makes us the personalities which we are, Kierkegaard said,
is that we make investments and take risks, can make mistakes, but have the
courage to make a leap of faith and only in
that way we create our personality. Sure, we make mistakes but God is merciful
and forgives us. Without such a leap, we are machines or dumb animals.
10.
Discuss the Cosmological Argument for the
existence of God.
The
Cosmological Argument claims that everything
has to go back to a common beginning, a kind of 'Big Bang,' and that beginning
means that there was a 'Beginner,' and that is God. This originated with Aristotle,
who claimed that everything had to have a
cause, and that cause had to have a cause too, and so on. But nothing goes on forever, Aristotle
claimed, "there is no infinite
regress," and there has to be a First Cause that caused everything. This First Cause he called God. Christian philosophers then took this
argument over from Aristotle. But nowadays people are not so sure
everything has to have a cause. In some
areas of physics events happen without a cause.
Also, we are not sure that there has to be a first cause. It is possible that life and time are
endless, and that everything goes on without end and has been going on forever
without a beginning, even though that is difficult to imagine for us. Lastly,
it may be that Life is circular, and that events repeat themselves endlessly,
maybe with some variations.
11.
Discuss the Argument from Design for the
existence of God. What did David
Hume think about this proof?
The
Argument from Design states that the Universe is a perfectly constructed
machine that has to have been constructed by a Perfect Being, or God. David
Hume was the first to criticize this and say
that the universe is sloppily constructed and more like the job of a
"beginning God." The movement
of the stars may seem perfect but in other areas there is room for improvement,
especially as far as justice is concerned.
And that is very important since the Abrahamic God is a God of justice,
of which there is not enough in this world.
12.
Explain the
Hindu and Buddhist idea of Karma.
Hinduism
believes in re-incarnation: it teaches that when we die, we are reborn and have
another go at life. Initially we start
out with a soul, atman, which is not personal but is a part of the universal
spirit, the Brahman. Throughout our lives our actions form additions to our
atman and those additions personalize our atman and tend to influence our
actions and steer us into certain directions. These additions that try to
influence us are called ‘karma.’ For example, when I smoke, I become addicted
and in this and my following lives I will tend to smoke. But, Hinduism teaches, we have a free will
and can ignore what our karma wants us to do.
We have a choice between being directed by our karma or following
‘dharma,’ the divine law that tells us what is good and what isn’t. When we
follow our karma, we are punished by being re-born as a less attractive being,
for example a mosquito but when we follow dharma we are born as a better human
being, e.g. the child of nice and funny parents.
Buddhism differs from Hinduism in that
Buddhism does not think we have souls.
But, like Hinduism, Buddhism teaches that we decide by our actions
whether we are going to be born ‘up’ or ‘down’ in our next life. The same applies to fortunes and misfortunes
in our life: when we do good, we are rewarded in this life or the next; when we
do wrong we are punished. There is no Evil in Hinduism or Buddhism: we always
get what we deserve, if not in this life, then in the next.
13.
Discuss
Freud's explanation of religion.
Freud
proposed that when we are about three years old, we believe that our parents
are omnipotent and omniscient, like God.
This is a comforting idea: someone will always be in charge and care for
us, just like our parents. Then, as we
grow older, Freud claims we
change our minds about our parents, but we still keep the same idea of God that
is typical for a three year old child. But there is no reason why that idea
should stay the same because as we grow older, our ideas about the world
change, and then why not our idea of God?
Some people will indeed need safety, but they may find this safety in
jobs, towns, families, companies, degrees, skills, knowledge. Others will enjoy
the feeling of growing more independent and assume responsibilities and care for
others as their parents had cared for them.
There is no reason to assume that everybody will stay stuck in the idea
of God they had in their first few years of life. Nowadays some think that Freud’s
idea of God was actually the idea of Austrian society about their Emperor
Franz Joseph,
who was associated with a Superfather image who loved all his subjects and knew
and could do anything. This image crashed, not surprisingly, in World War I
when a revolution put an end to the Austrian monarchy.
14.
Discuss Kant's theory of Art.
Kant
thought that we first organize the basic elements of our experience into
'images' with the help of our imagination.
For example, we see something red and then something round and with the
help of our imagination we put the two together and then have the image
'something round and red.' This is the first step in our organization of our
experience. The second step comes when with what he calls our 'understanding'
we add to that image a concept: 'apple,' in this case.
Art,
according to Kant, results when we 'get stuck' in this one
identification and come up with some more concepts. We don't stop at 'apple' but go on: 'bloody
moon,' 'bloody earth,' or even 'what Eve gave to
Adam,' 'flattery,' 'teacher's pet,' and so on.
There is no purpose
in this activity, Kant says, while normally the purpose of
language or drawings is communication. But still, not just anything we do is Art. Art, Kant
says, has "purposeless purposiveness," or "purposefull
purposivelessness." That is, there is no purpose but the artist has to
take her or his art seriously and work just as hard as if there really were a
purpose. Kant says that
this artistic behavior has no purpose.
It is like doodling on a piece of paper during a boring class. But the way he describes Art
sounds a lot like a description of Play.
Play, too, has no purpose beyond itself but still everybody works hard
at it and sticks to the rules. There are several theories about Play, and they
may apply to Art too.
First, play is
seen as training. Everybody plays football,
which is useful because when Minnesota
invades Iowa we have a large mass
of trained people to fight them back.
Secondly, it is seen not really as training,
but as something related to it, which is best described as 'use it or lose it.'
That is, we write short stories for fun and for no purpose, and then if we have
to write a business letter, we can still write.
Third, Kant and others think that conceptualizing in a
disciplined way is what makes us people. "I conceptualize in a disciplined
way, therefore I am." We are people
and not dog or bats, Kant & others would say, because our
synthetic a priori include such activities as 'establishing causal relations'
and 'conceptualizing and interpreting.' Generally, we spot problems in our
life, and deal with them by using our mind to find solutions. When we don't have any problems, we start
imagining them. Some people claim
we do so to keep in problem solving shape, but others say it comes naturally to
us, like breathing. It is a part of our
nature we can not live without.
15. Describe the three main
movements in Islam.
All
Muslims recognize Muhammad as the last Prophet; they consider Jesus
to be another Prophet, a predecessor of Muhammad. They also
believed that God or Allah sent Muhammad the Koran or Qur’an
through the voice of the angel Gabriel. They are
also guided by the Sunnah: the story of Mohammed's
life and a collection of his sayings. The Hadith is a biography of Muhammad
and some close associates and some of this decisions and therefore overlaps
somewhat with the Sunnah.
The Sunni make up around 80% of the Islam.
A Caliph used to head them, which was not an inherited function. The last
Caliph, Mutasim, died in 1258 when the Mongols under Hulagu destroyed Baghdad.
The Sunni are more administratively oriented while emotions and charisma play
an important role among the Shiites.
The Shiites, mostly living in Persia
or Iran, call
their leader 'Imam;' all Imams have to be descended from Mohammed's
daughter Fatima and her husband Ali.
Ali's son, Husayn, was murdered before he could
succeed his father Ali as an Imam, and this
could be one reason why the Shiite movement is in general emotional, emphasizes
suffering, and relies on charismatic leaders. There is now no living Imam;
different Shiite division differ on who was the last Imam. The first four Imams
were also the first four Caliphs. Some think the last Imam went into hiding
centuries ago and eventually will return to lead the Faithful.
The Sufi movement is mystical; they
emphasize direct and mystical knowledge of God, and therefore do not stress as
much as the Sunni and the Shiites the main
Islamic religious sources: the Koran, i.e. their holy scripture, and the
Sunnah. Their center of worship is the Friday evening ‘dhikr’ or ‘zikr, which
means ‘remembrance,’ which mostly consists in repeating Allah’s name, often in
songs and poems. Music and literature is very important for the Sufi.
16.
. Discuss
the Buddhist saying that people are like onions. What is at the core of this
'onion?' How does this relate to the
doctrine of Karma & Dharma? What are the advantages of this view of one's
personality?
At the core there is Nothing, and that is
good because
then our personality can adapt to whatever
task is at
hand
by discarding whatever part of one's personality that is inconvenient at the
moment. Our personality is shaped by the
karma of our present and past lives and gets in the way when we have to perform
a task that does not agree with out personality.
17.
Explain Hegel's
Classical vs. Romantic mode in Art. How did Hegel think these
modes occurred? Was he right?
Hegel
thought that the universe was one great Spirit that continuously changed into
its opposite or antithesis, and then the original form of the Spirit and its
antithesis would change into a synthesis.
This, he claimed, was most clearly
visible in Art, where we see a form of Art
that emphasizes the relation between the Here and the Not-Here. This form of Art
Hegel named "Romantic Art. It is
succeeded by a form that emphasizes
only the relation between different parts of the Here. This he called
"Classical Art." For instance, in Medieval Art, a Romantic Art, the
Here, that is: our life and this world, is only seen as a preparation for the Not-Here:
Heaven. Art does not stand by itself: other
expressions of the Spirit, for example theology or physics, also reflect this
Here vs. Not-Here split. The Middle Ages
are followed by the Renaissance, where the
interest is only in the Here: our earth. Renaissance
Art is therefore a Classical Art, in Hegel's terminology. It
is the period of geographical explorations and scientific discovery, and in Art,
too, the emphasis is on our earth. The Renaissance
concentrates only on the Here, or our world, and is therefore the opposite or
antithesis of the Middle Ages, which connected the Not-Here, or Heaven with the
Here, or earth. After the Renaissance came the
Baroque and the Contra-Reformation where the emphasis was again
on the Here but also on the Not-Here.
Moreover, the Not-Here had become diversified: there was now a Catholic
Not-Here and one or more non-Catholic Not-Here's: Calvinist, Lutheran,
Anabaptist. The Baroque is, according to Hegel, both the
antithesis and the same as the Middle Ages: like the Middle Ages it divides the
universe into the Here and the Not-Here, but it is also the opposite of the
Middle Ages because the Not-Here or higher reality consists in the Baroque of
several higher realities: those of Catholicism, Lutheranism, Anabaptism,
Calvinism. Hegel should
have added Judaism and the Islam but he was
very narrow minded and Euro-centric. The Baroque is followed by Classicism that
at first seems to display a split between the Here and the Not-Here: Classicism
idealized Greek and Roman antiquity. But Greek
and Roman antiquity are both part of the
Here. They are both on this earth,
though two or two-and-a-half thousand years ago. Classicism therefore
concentrates on our earth and it is different from the Renaissance
because in the Renaissance the earth was still
seen as one whole, even though parts of it were still unknown. In Classicism the earth is seen as three
different places: our world, the Greek world, and the Roman
world, and the latter two were seen as better than our world. After Classicism--and
all this is according to Hegel--comes Romanticism where there
is an enormous diversification of the Not-Here.
Not only do we find in the Not-Here major European religions, but
Eastern religions, various forms of nationalism, 'other worlds' reachable with
the help of drugs, and even beliefs in the divine nature of Love. After
Romanticism comes Realism, where artists describe any part of our earth. The
last period is Symbolism, where each individual artist has an 'other world' of
her or his own creation, and sometimes even several such Not-Here's. The problem with Hegel's
theory is that after around 1910 AD we see the emergence of several co-existing
'World Spirits,' and his neat categorization for alternating forms of art does
not seem to apply after that date anymore. It also only applied to Western
Europe, but for Hegel that was "the
World!"
18. Is anatomy
destiny for women? Does the female body
force women in a role of care giver, mother, or feeder?
Simone
de Beauvoir wrote about how many female
biological
functions
are dangerous or unpleasant for the woman, and serve more the human race than
the individual woman. Menstruation, for
example, is unpleasant. Pregnancy and
childbirth
are dangerous for women but beneficial for mankind as a whole; additionally,
they make women vulnerable so that they have to rely on the protection of
males. Sherry Ortner
agreed with De Beauvoir and notices that in many societies
women are associated with nature: with children, feeding children and adults,
and childbirth. But, Ortner continues,
that does NOT mean that women should STAY with nature. On the contrary, her close association with
nature makes woman uniquely qualified to appreciate culture. Only a woman, for
example, can REALLY appreciate the change from a pre-toilet trained
toddler to a Nobel prize winner because she has been intimately involved in the
life of the toddler in a way no man is, according to Ortner. Ann Ferguson sees “androgyny” as a desired
state: an androgynous person could be female or male, depending on whether it
is at a given time more important to engage in female activities—feeding,
giving birth, toilet training—or male
activities: hunting, defending, running for the presidency. Only females, Ann
Ferguson states, can be androgynous because
their close relation to nature enables women to appreciate culture and nature
in a way males can not.
19.
Discuss Kierkegaard or
Dostoevsky’s interpretation of suffering.
How does it compare with the Buddhist or Hindu understanding of
suffering?
Suffering occurs when
something unpleasant occurs to us and we don’t do anything about it because we
can’t or we accept it without reasoning or explanation. In religion, they claim,
there is no real suffering because we decide that we suffer for a higher purpose:
to please God, for example, or to get into Heaven. Then what we do is not suffering, it is an
investment, a tool, to get something good. It is our tool or way to express we
are committed to something or somebody by deciding that it or (s)he is worth
suffering for. And when we 'suffer' for a purpose, then we don't 'suffer'
anymore but we 'invest,' 'train,' or 'prepare'
for something or somebody. Kierkegaard claims
that this is how we choose our personality. Kierkegaard agrees
with Kant that we choose our personality, and adds that we do
so by committing our personality first of all to a God, but also to a spouse,
or even a sports team. In Hinduism suffering is also seen as connected with
personality and Self, but both suffering and Self are seen as something
undesirable that should be ended as soon as possible, along with our Self or
atman.
20. Discuss Carol
Gilligan's interpretation of Lawrence Kohlberg's ethical experiment.
Lawrence Kohlberg conducted
in experiment in which he told children about a husband whose wife was dying of
a disease for which there was a cure available
in the local drug store. The couple was
poor, however, and could not buy the cure.
Was the husband, Kohlberg asked, justified in stealing the drug, and why
(not)? He was, answered the boys, because a human life is priceless and should
be saved at any cost, even at the cost of committing a crime. The girls saw things differently and did not
give a direct answer, and were therefore classified as logically inferior by
Kohlberg. But Gilligan interpreted Kohlberg's research differently: girls
answered that the druggist had an obligation to get the drug to the dying wife,
and the husband had an obligation to pay for it, and that they should work
something out between themselves in what nowadays would be called a 'win-win'
solution. Gilligan connected the two
different solutions with other research—by Nancy
Chodorow--on male-female thinking and
proposed that the boys' answer shows that they are interested in classifying
actions as either right or wrong. This tendency to classify supposedly is
typical for males. Girls, however, are
not interested in classification but in relations. In this case there are relations between
husband and wife (he has to find a cure for her), between the druggist and the
wife (he has to supply medicine to his customers) and the husband and the
druggist (the husband has to pay for what he buys). Are males interested in classifying? Aristotle
attempted a classification by stating that most things or beings have an
essence which consists of two parts: its form and its matter; Descartes
classified the substances in three groups: God, Mind and Matter; and Hume
did write about a relation, causality, but his thesis was that there is no
causality. Immanuel Kant
is probably the ultimate classifier: he provided a rigid way to classify all
actions as right or wrong and did not allow for exceptions. Lying, as he showed
in the Case of the Inquiring Murderer, is always
wrong. So, at least as far as these philosophers
are concerned, it seems as if Gilligan has a point.