All CLEP Humanities Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #10 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Seventeenth And Eighteenth Century Nonfiction And Philosophy
Who is missing from this famous triad: John Locke, George Berkeley, and __________________?
Immanuel Kant
David Hume
Ludwig Wittgenstein
Richard Rorty
Alexis de Tocqueville
David Hume
The famous Anglophonic, philosophical triad runs: John Locke, George Berkeley, and David Hume. Berkeley famously critiqued Locke's view of knowledge and of mind-independent substances. He held that Locke's overall worldview encouraged us to posit an unknown entity (substance) that never could be known. Only various accidents of that substance (i.e. its various qualities) could be known. For Berkeley, this spelled a disaster—one that led ultimately to a kind of skepticism and atheism. He therefore, proposed that everything is an idea—and that there is no substance. God was the creator of every one of these ideas, thus saving philosophy from atheism—or so he thought.
The Skeptical Scotsman, Hume, believed that Berkeley himself was a father of skepticism. Hume took over Berkeley's ideas and furthered them into a very subjectivistic theory of knowledge, discussed in this Treatise on Human Nature and Essays Concerning Human Understanding. Very often, when these men are listed, they are listed as a triad: Locke, Berkeley, and Hume.
Example Question #11 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Seventeenth And Eighteenth Century Nonfiction And Philosophy
Which of the following general schools of philosophical thought holds that all knowledge comes from experience and is limited to what can be experienced?
Imaginitivism
Empiricism
Moderate Realism
Rationalism
Legalism
Empiricism
Empirical knowledge is the kind of knowledge that is gained through experience. Strictly speaking, there is no "school of empiricism," but there are general veins of empiricist thought throughout philosophy. Most famous along these lines are various English-speaking thinkers such as Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, George Berkeley, and David Hume. In a strange way, some aspects of the thought of Emmanuel Kant can be added to this list, though he is also heavily influenced by rationalist strands of thought in continental Europe. He does believe in some forms of a priori cognition—that is, knowledge that is independent of experience.
The general idea of an empiricist philosophy is that our knowledge arises from sensation and is limited thereto. It does not hold that we have innate ideas at all. Thus, even ideas like "infinity" are formed by knowing that there could be an infinite sequence of particular experiences constructed from our finite experiences. Of course, each of these thinkers has a unique viewpoint, so "empiricist" is a single category only in a very loose sense.
Example Question #513 : Clep: Humanities
Who is famous for stating that the human mind is a tabula rasa or a "blank slate"?
Martin Heidegger
Plato
Jeremy Bentham
Seneca
John Locke
John Locke
The most famous account of the mind as a blank slate is that which is expressed by John Locke in his Essay Concerning Human Understanding. There, he emphasizes that everything in the mind must be derived from experience. We are born without any experiences, thus meaning that we are a kind of slate or tablet waiting to be "informed" by our experiences. Locke was no great innovator in this regard. He was taking over an old theme from Medieval and late-scholastic philosophy that was ultimately found in Aristotle. Nevertheless, for many modern thinkers, Locke's theory of knowledge was very influential—even long after it was questioned by many philosophers. (Indeed, it remained influential on the official French curriculum through the early 20th century!)
Example Question #514 : Clep: Humanities
Which of the following philosophers is the best candidate for having added the qualification, "Except for the intellect itself," to the adage, "Nothing was in the intellect which was not first in the senses."
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
Immanuel Kant
George Berkeley
John Locke
David Hume
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz wrote a work New Essays on Human Understanding as a response to the work of John Locke. It was not published until many years after the death of both men. In the essay, there is a famous line where Leibniz quotes a so-called maxim of empiricism: Nihil est in intellectu quod non fuerit in sensu—Nothing is in the intellect which was not first in the senses. He then adds a qualifier: excipe, nisi intellectus ipse—except for the intellect itself. The idea is that while all knowledge must be derived from our sense experience, still, in order for there to be intellectual knowledge, there must be an intellect to integrate our experience. Hence, Leibniz hoped to maintain the insights of the general school of thought known as rationalism, which emphasized the direct and pre-experiential role of the human mind in the shaping of our knowledge.