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Philosophy and Ethics
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‘The Intelligent Design argument makes no sense.’ Discuss.

A cohort of fundamentalist theists would strongly disagree with this statement, arguing that Intelligent Design (ID) which postulates the existence of an 'Intelligent Designer' (i.e. God) is a logical exp...

Answered by Antonia A. Philosophy and Ethics tutor
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Describe some differences between quantitative and qualitative approaches to data collection in research. (4 marks)

The primary difference between quantitative and qualitative research is that quantitative data is objectively measured whereas qualitative data is more subjectively interpreted. Quantitative data is numer...

Answered by Iman B. Philosophy and Ethics tutor
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Ethics: Considering Deontological Arguments of Ethics, to what extent do the strengths and weaknesses demonstrate the plausibility of this argument as a guideline for moral decision making?

Deontological arguments follow the Kantian notion, of the same name, that identifies that actions should be performed because they wrong or right in themselves rather than the consequences they procure. ...

Answered by Esther A. Philosophy and Ethics tutor
1816 Views

What needs to be included in the essay?

It's important that you are answering and linking back to the essay question at the start and end of each paragraph.Other than that, you need to make a judgement for yourself which you can state clearly i...

Answered by Hannah J. Philosophy and Ethics tutor
1302 Views

What is the difference between "a priori knowledge" and "a posteriori knowledge"?

Put shortly, whether something can be know "a priori" or "a posteriori" depends upon whether it can be known from experience or without experience. A priori knowledge is knowledge that...

Answered by Amy H. Philosophy and Ethics tutor
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