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