Top 150+ Solved Philosophical Methods MCQ Questions Answer
Q. Who is the author of the book Critique of Pure Reason?
a. descartes
b. hume
c. berkeley
d. immanuel kant
Q. For-----, dialectic is the process of the logical development of thought and reality through thesis and antithesis into a synthesis.
a. kant
b. hegel
c. plato
d. zeno
Q. There is the final movement in which the spirit reduces Nature to the inwardness, which the spirit itself is. Only at this stage the spirit rises to self consciousness in man. According to Hegel spirit rises to self consciousness in man. According to Hegel this stage is -----
a. thesis
b. antithesis
c. synthesis
d. none
Q. For Hegel, Idea means
a. concrete particular
b. concrete universal
c. abstract particular
d. abstract universal
Q. According to the Absolute Idealism of Hegel.
a. there is only one reality
b. reality is relative
c. there are many realities
d. none of the above
Q. ------, in Hegel’s dialectic, means to resolve into a higher unity or to bring into the wholeness that which is fragmentary.
a. sublation
b. geist
c. thesis
d. anti-thesis
Q. ..... is the author of an all-embracing system of dialectical idealism
a. hegel
b. kant
c. hume
d. none of these
Q. According to Hegel, there are three stages in the logical development of spirit: subjective mind, objective mind and ......
a. absolute god
b. absolute mind
c. absolute spirit
d. absolute idea
Q. ---- method, which is the proper method of philosophy, according to Hegel, is determined by the subject matter of philosophy itself.
a. the synthetically
b. the analytical
c. the dialectical
d. the geometrical
Q. According to ......., real is rational and rational is real
a. russell
b. wittgenstein
c. husserl
d. hegel
Q. Who introduced triad of thesis, antithesis and synthesis into German philosophy for the first time?
a. hegel
b. kant
c. pierce
d. fichte
Q. Who criticizes the Hegelian concept of dialectical triad and says that dialectic does not necessarily involve the identity of opposites?
a. bradley
b. carnap
c. descartes
d. kant