Year 13 revision: Theories

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Across
  1. 2. Tpye of utilitarianism Hare and Singer prefer
  2. 5. The only thing that is good without qualification
  3. 7. Everything is physical or supervenes upon the physical (this includes properties, events, objects and any substance(s) that exist).
  4. 9. Theory that it is moral to maximise pleasure
  5. 11. The argumetn for substance dualism: Mind is unextended and thinking
  6. 13. an absolute command
  7. 14. There are no mind-independent moral properties/facts.
  8. 16. A mental state that is 'about' something
  9. 18. Hume's gap: issue with realism and utilitarianism
  10. 20. Type of machine Nozick uses
  11. 21. The property dualist that uses the zombie argument
  12. 23. Moral statements are used to give instructions
  13. 25. The first formulation of the CI
  14. 27. moral properties are non-natural or super natural properties
  15. 32. Bentham's version
  16. 34. All mental states are identical to brain states (‘ontological’ reduction) although ‘mental state’ and ‘brain state’ are not synonymous (so not an ‘analytic’ reduction)
  17. 36. An 'If then' command
  18. 38. the theory that we make a flaw when making moral statements
  19. 39. Another word for intentional mental states
  20. 41. There are mind-independent moral properties/facts
  21. 42. You should act 'out' of this
  22. 43. The subjective mental experience
  23. 44. moral _______: an issue with moral anti-realism
  24. 45. Moral statements are statements of emotion
Down
  1. 1. A physical duplicate that lacks qualia
  2. 3. all mental states can be characterised in terms of functional roles which can be multiply realised.
  3. 4. Some or all common-sense (“folk-psychological”) mental states/properties do not exist and our common-sense understanding is radically mistaken.
  4. 6. Acording to Mill: Pleasures of the mind
  5. 8. An issue with Behaviourism and Mind-brain type identity theory, not functionalism though!
  6. 10. The arguments for substance Dualism: using Liebniz's law
  7. 12. What is missing from epiphenomenalism
  8. 15. A moral rules
  9. 17. Mental states are just a byproduct of physical processes- But they exist!
  10. 19. The analogy Aristotle uses, e.g. playing a piano
  11. 22. Type of behaviourism: propositions about mental states are propositions about behavioural dispositions (ie propositions that use ordinary language)
  12. 24. Mary's dad, I guess? Loves polar bears...
  13. 26. The type of dualism that states mental states and physical states can impact each other
  14. 28. Minds exist and are not identical to bodies or to parts of bodies.
  15. 29. There are at least some mental properties that are neither reducible to nor supervenient upon physical properties.
  16. 30. The ultimate ends for human life: Aristotle
  17. 31. What should you not use people as, according to Kant
  18. 33. According to aristotle: A character trait in excess or deficiancy
  19. 34. She gains something new leaving the room...
  20. 35. Moral properties are natural properties
  21. 37. This is the 'slave of passion' according to Hume
  22. 40. Type of behaviourism: All propositions about mental states can be reduced without loss of meaning to propositions that exclusively use the language of physics to talk about bodily states/movements