All CLEP Humanities Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Nineteenth Century Nonfiction And Philosophy
Who were the authors of the influential tract of economic philosophy The Communist Manifesto?
Che Guevara and Fidel Castro
Leon Trotsky and Vladimir Lenin
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels
Adam Smith and David Hume
Charles Fourier and Robert Owen
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels
Both Friedrich Engels and Karl Marx were German-born anti-capitalists active in London's expatriate radical community. In 1848, they wrote and published The Communist Manifesto as part of a communist organization, originally in German. Their critique of capitalism from a Hegelian viewpoint crystallized reaction to capitalism, and launched the most influential political movement of the twentieth century.
Example Question #2 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Nineteenth Century Nonfiction And Philosophy
Henry David Thoreau is most closely associated with the literary movement known as __________.
romanticism
existentialism
realism
picaresque
transcendentalism
transcendentalism
Henry David Thoreau was a nineteenth-century author and philosopher from Massachusetts who was one of the leading figures of the transcendentalism movement. Transcendentalism focused on the goodness of nature, human possibility, and a free-form spirituality that separated itself from Christianity. Thoreau's Walden, a meditation on the two years he spent in a cabin in the woods by Walden Pond, is considered a classic of the genre.
Example Question #22 : Nonfiction And Philosophy
The philosopher who wrote the works Thus Spake Zarathustra, The Twilight of the Idols, and Beyond Good and Evil was __________.
Friedrich Nietzsche
Arthur Schopenhauer
Soren Kierkegaard
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Immanuel Kant
Friedrich Nietzsche
The philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche was an almost revolutionary figure in philosophy during the late nineteenth century. Trained as a scholar of classical philosophy, most of Nietzsche's works, like Thus Spake Zarathustra, The Twilight of the Idols, and Beyond Good and Evil, challenged the philosophical norms of his time. Nietzsche argued against strict rationality, traditional morals, and the view of humanity during the nineteenth century.
Example Question #4 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Nineteenth Century Nonfiction And Philosophy
Which of the following philosophers is most closely associated with the existentialist movement?
John Locke
William James
Immanuel Kant
Soren Kierkegaard
Georg Friedrich Wilhelm Hegel
Soren Kierkegaard
Soren Kierkegaard worked in relative obscurity for a giant of Western philosophy, writing only in Danish during the early nineteenth century without a University posting. Although not widely read in his lifetime, Kierkegaard became hugely influential in the twentieth century and is considered one of the intellectual founders of existentialism. Kierkegaard's focus on individual thought, the subjective nature of human reality, and a critique of traditional religion were all forerunners of twentieth century existential thought.
Example Question #4 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Nineteenth Century Nonfiction And Philosophy
Who of the following wrote the work Utilitarianism?
Immanuel Kant
David Hume
John Stuart Mill
Jacques Maritain
Martin Heidegger
John Stuart Mill
The work Utilitarianism (1863) was written by John Stuart Mill. He was a prodigiously educated man, taught in a thorough manner by his father James Mill and influenced heavily by Jeremy Bentham. This hard education in his youth actually led to something of a mental breakdown, from which he recovered relatively quickly. The work Utilitarianism is a kind of extension or continuation of Bentham's thought on moral philosophy. It is best known for the principle that states, simply speaking, that the best action is the one that brings about the greatest amount of happiness.
This outlook can become very subjective depending on how one understands it. There remain many philosophers who are utilitarian in bent to this very day, so Mill's work retains great influence in almost all courses on ethics taught in undergraduate institutions.
Example Question #5 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Nineteenth Century Nonfiction And Philosophy
Which of the following thinkers is famous for the work The Phenomenology of Spirit?
Desiderius Erasmus
Martin Heidegger
Jean-Paul Sartre
Edmund Husserl
Georg Wilhelm Hegel
Georg Wilhelm Hegel
Hegel is perhaps most famous for having written his dense tome The Phenomenology of Spirit (1807). Ostensibly, this work traces the different forms that human consciousness can take, working through pure sense perception, then to various kinds of scientific, moral, aesthetic, and historical modes of consciousness. The work is, however, an incredibly difficult text to read. The prose is dense and it is often difficult to distinguish between the theoretical and historical claims that Hegel is making in the course of his argumentation.
For all of that difficulty, however, the work was very influential, spawning numerous different schools of interpretation. Although he influenced most thinkers coming after him in continental Europe, his most famous "follower" was Karl Marx. Marx really cannot be considered a direct disciple of Hegel, for he significantly altered his viewpoint. However, he took over the notion of the dialectic of reason exposited by Hegel, using it in his own materialistic philosophy.
Example Question #6 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Nineteenth Century Nonfiction And Philosophy
For which of the following works is J.S. Mill known?
An Essay Concerning Human Nature
On Elections
On Liberty
A Treatise on First Philosophy
On the Evils of Self-governance
On Liberty
Although he is also known for his work Utilitarianism, Mill's On Liberty has also been quite influential. Among other things in the work, Mill discusses the just limits that might be placed on an individual by the state. He contends that it is only just for the state to limit human freedom insofar as an individual is a danger to others. This outlook is held by many people today, and while Mill is not the only person from whom it derives, his work remains an important source for any such doctrine that would defend such a high amount of individual liberty in public life as a positive social good.
Example Question #7 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Nineteenth Century Nonfiction And Philosophy
Which of the following philosophers is most famous for his work reflecting on the sacrifice of Abraham?
Søren Kierkegaard
Thomas Aquinas
Immanuel Kant
Johann Fichte
Augustine of Hippo
Søren Kierkegaard
Although Aquinas and Augustine surely reflected on the biblical figure Abraham, it was Søren Kierkegaard who is most famous for his work Fear and Trembling. In that work, he undertakes a series of dramatic reflections on the role of anxiety, faith, and solitude in the life of Abraham, who was asked to by God to kill his only son (indeed, the son of the promises made to Abraham by God). The work reflects on how the individual person is placed "face-to-face" with God and with his or her moral destiny in the course of human life.
Example Question #23 : Nonfiction And Philosophy
Epistemology refers to the specific philosophical investigation of __________.
the form of logic
the problem of human existence
the theory of knowledge
the issue of rationality
the phenomenology of ideas
the theory of knowledge
Epistemology, which is a specific form of philosophy, is devoted to the nature of thinking itself, or the theory of knowledge. As such, epistemology deals with questions regarding how people know what they know or acquire knowledge. The field is remarkably new in the history of philosophy, only being coined by the Scottish thinker James Frederick Ferrier in the nineteenth century.
Example Question #1 : Answering Other Questions About Nonfiction And Philosophy
What are the three stages of societal consciousness discussed in Auguste Comte's The Course of Positive Philosophy?
Logical, Rhetorical, and Historical
Theological, Metaphysical, and Positive
Polytheist, Monotheist, and Atheistic
Supportive, Derivative, and Elevating
Theistic, Agnostic, and Scientific
Theological, Metaphysical, and Positive
In his The Course of Positive Philosophy, Auguste Comte famously divided the history of societies up into three main periods. These periods are said to be characterized by their manners of explaining the causes of human experience. The first is the theological phase. In this stage, causes are explained primarily in terms of gods or a god. Then, in the "metaphysical" stage, abstract notions are used to explain the causes of things. Finally, in the "positive" stage, only "positive" (or posited) facts and scientific observations are the primary mode of explanation. Comte thought the final type of society was the highest and most developed. By doing so, he set up his own time's philosophical conception of knowledge as the pinnacle of human thought.