The document provides 5 philosophical questions for an assignment on World War 1. Students are instructed to answer each question in their own words, justify their answers, and take a philosophical approach. They must write a minimum of 300 words for each question for a total of at least 1500 words. The questions discuss why innocent people suffer, whether it is better to make the majority or few happy, if mathematics accurately represents reality, if a perfect clone would be the same person, and how we know our memories are genuine. The formatting, file name, and deadline are also specified, and it notes the answers will be subject to the academic integrity policy. It was prepared by the instructor Christian C. Estacion and closes with the phrase "Ut In
The document provides 5 philosophical questions for an assignment on World War 1. Students are instructed to answer each question in their own words, justify their answers, and take a philosophical approach. They must write a minimum of 300 words for each question for a total of at least 1500 words. The questions discuss why innocent people suffer, whether it is better to make the majority or few happy, if mathematics accurately represents reality, if a perfect clone would be the same person, and how we know our memories are genuine. The formatting, file name, and deadline are also specified, and it notes the answers will be subject to the academic integrity policy. It was prepared by the instructor Christian C. Estacion and closes with the phrase "Ut In
The document provides 5 philosophical questions for an assignment on World War 1. Students are instructed to answer each question in their own words, justify their answers, and take a philosophical approach. They must write a minimum of 300 words for each question for a total of at least 1500 words. The questions discuss why innocent people suffer, whether it is better to make the majority or few happy, if mathematics accurately represents reality, if a perfect clone would be the same person, and how we know our memories are genuine. The formatting, file name, and deadline are also specified, and it notes the answers will be subject to the academic integrity policy. It was prepared by the instructor Christian C. Estacion and closes with the phrase "Ut In
justify your answer. I hope that everyone will explain every answer in a philosophical way. Neutrality makes you side with the wrong. Use your logic or common sense. 1. Why do innocent people suffer? 2. Is it better to try to make the majority happy at the expense of a few or make a few happy at the expense of many? 3. Is looking at reality through mathematics an accurate representation of how things work? 4. If there existed a perfect clone of you, would it also be you? Would it act in exactly the same manner as you or would it act differently? If it acted differently then it would still be you? At what point it would not be you? 5. Human memory has been shown to be incredibly unreliable. With that in mind, how do you know which of your memories are genuine and which have been altered or made up?
FORMAT: 12, Verdana, justify, double spacing, minimum of 300 words PER QUESTION (TOTAL: at least 1500 words for questions 1-5) PDF file FILENAME:
DEADLINE: February 21, 2022
TAKE NOTE: ALL SUBMISSIONS SHALL BE SUBJECT TO ACADEMIC
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