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PHIL 341 Midterm Study Guide: Critical Thinking Concepts UPDATED Exam Questions and CORRECT Answers

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PHIL 341 Midterm Study Guide: Critical Thinking Concepts UPDATED Exam Questions and CORRECT Answers Definition of a claim - CORRECT ANSWER true or false. Definition of an issue - CORRECT ANSWER discussion. -A statement that asserts something to be -A matter or topic that is open to debate or Objective vs. Subjective claims - CORRECT ANSWER -Objective claims are based on observable phenomena, while subjective claims are based on personal feelings or opinions

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PHIL 341 Midterm Study Guide: Critical
Thinking Concepts UPDATED Exam
Questions and CORRECT Answers
Definition of a claim - CORRECT ANSWER -A statement that asserts something to be
true or false.


Definition of an issue - CORRECT ANSWER -A matter or topic that is open to debate or
discussion.


Objective vs. Subjective claims - CORRECT ANSWER -Objective claims are based on
observable phenomena, while subjective claims are based on personal feelings or opinions.


Belief bias - CORRECT ANSWER -The tendency to accept or reject arguments based on
the believability of their conclusions rather than the strength of their reasoning.


Confirmation bias - CORRECT ANSWER -The tendency to search for, interpret, and
remember information in a way that confirms one's preexisting beliefs.


Availability heuristic - CORRECT ANSWER -A mental shortcut that relies on immediate
examples that come to a person's mind when evaluating a specific topic.


False consensus effect - CORRECT ANSWER -The tendency to overestimate the extent to
which others share our beliefs and behaviors.


Bandwagon effect - CORRECT ANSWER -The phenomenon where individuals adopt
certain behaviors or beliefs because others are doing so.


Negativity bias - CORRECT ANSWER -The psychological phenomenon by which
humans give more weight to negative experiences than positive ones.

, Loss aversion - CORRECT ANSWER -The tendency to prefer avoiding losses to
acquiring equivalent gains.


In-group bias - CORRECT ANSWER -The tendency to favor one's own group over others.



Fundamental attribution error - CORRECT ANSWER -The tendency to attribute others'
actions to their character while attributing our own actions to external factors.


Obedience to authority - CORRECT ANSWER -The tendency to comply with instructions
from an authority figure.


Overconfidence effect - CORRECT ANSWER -The phenomenon where a person's
subjective confidence in their judgments is greater than their objective accuracy.


Better-than-average effect - CORRECT ANSWER -The cognitive bias whereby
individuals overestimate their own qualities and abilities relative to others.


Definition and parts of an argument - CORRECT ANSWER -An argument consists of
premises that support a conclusion.


Deductive arguments (valid vs. sound) - CORRECT ANSWER -A valid argument is one
where if the premises are true, the conclusion must be true; a sound argument is valid and has
true premises.


Inductive arguments (weak vs. strong) - CORRECT ANSWER -A strong inductive
argument is one where if the premises are true, the conclusion is likely true; a weak inductive
argument does not provide strong support for the conclusion.


Unstated premises - CORRECT ANSWER -Assumptions that are not explicitly stated but
are necessary for the argument to hold.

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