Question 1
Nietzsche indeed holds to the Platonist conception of objective moral values and objectivity in truth, despite his affirmation of the Will-to-Power, for behind Platonism lies Power.
True
False
5 points
Question 2
"God" represents, for Nietzsche, the way in which past historical peoples coped with the absurdity and nihilism of existence, namely by revolting against time and its passing.
True
False
5 points
Question 3
For Nietzsche, behind reason's search for truth lies the Will-to-Power and thus the revelation that humans are merely animals; reason's will to truth has thus destroyed itself and revealed itself for what it truly is: a farce.
True
False
5 points
Question 5
Nietzsche's maxim "What does not kill me makes me stronger" leads to the nihilistic denial of life and resentful hatred towards a purported cause of suffering, as evidenced by Kelly Clarkson in her tune.
True
False
5 points
Question 4
Slave morality, characterized by Nietzsche as the unconditional affirmation of life, fuels the resentment of the Übermench.
True
False
5 points
Question 5
Although Foucault argues for a liberation of sex from power, he nevertheless holds to a strict naturalistic approach (based on natural law) regarding sexual mores and values.
True
False
5 points
Question 6
Foucault and Nietzsche operate under the "Hermeneutics of Suspicion," that is, that there lies something deeper beind the merely apparant, which for both Nietzsche and Foucault was "power."
True
False
5 points
Question 7
For Foucault, "sexuality" and "gender" are inventions of modernity due to the ficticious "suppressive hypothesis," which led to various discourses and categorizations; however, there is only, for Foucault, "the body and its pleasures."
True
False
5 points
Question 8
Foucault argues in his "History of Sexuality" that the fundamental relation between sex and power lies in suppression, namely the suppression of sexual desires by those in power.
True
False
5 points
Question 9
Foucault argues that scientific claims of naturalistic vs. unnaturalistic sexual desires remain oblivious to the fact that "what is" is by definition "natural," since it comes from nature; Foucault therefore argues that all desires are natural.
True
False