Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@JimmyGreaser
Last active February 21, 2022 20:03
Show Gist options
  • Save JimmyGreaser/a465d7766107ceb0af5c9c17dffcbb4e to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Save JimmyGreaser/a465d7766107ceb0af5c9c17dffcbb4e to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
{"prompt": "Question: \"what work of writing is mentioned last?\"\nContext: \"A generation later, the Irish Anglican bishop, George Berkeley (1685\u20131753), determined that Locke's view immediately opened a door that would lead to eventual atheism. In response to Locke, he put forth in his Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge (1710) an important challenge to empiricism in which things only exist either as a result of their being perceived, or by virtue of the fact that they are an entity doing the perceiving. (For Berkeley, God fills in for humans by doing the perceiving whenever humans are not around to do it.) In his text Alciphron, Berkeley maintained that any order humans may see in nature is the language or handwriting of God. Berkeley's approach to empiricism would later come to be called subjective idealism.\"\nAnswer:", "completion": "Alciphron"}
{"prompt": "Question: \"Which train of thought allows for beliefs and ideas outside of what one can physically experience?\"\nContext: \"Philosophical empiricists hold no knowledge to be properly inferred or deduced unless it is derived from one's sense-based experience. This view is commonly contrasted with rationalism, which states that knowledge may be derived from reason independently of the senses. For example, John Locke held that some knowledge (e.g. knowledge of God's existence) could be arrived at through intuition and reasoning alone. Similarly Robert Boyle, a prominent advocate of the experimental method, held that we have innate ideas. The main continental rationalists (Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz) were also advocates of the empirical \"scientific method\".\"\nAnswer:", "completion": "rationalism"}
{"prompt": "Question: \"What term describes the stance that we are born with ideas that are not developed through experience?\"\nContext: \"Philosophical empiricists hold no knowledge to be properly inferred or deduced unless it is derived from one's sense-based experience. This view is commonly contrasted with rationalism, which states that knowledge may be derived from reason independently of the senses. For example, John Locke held that some knowledge (e.g. knowledge of God's existence) could be arrived at through intuition and reasoning alone. Similarly Robert Boyle, a prominent advocate of the experimental method, held that we have innate ideas. The main continental rationalists (Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz) were also advocates of the empirical \"scientific method\".\"\nAnswer:", "completion": "innate ideas"}
{"prompt": "Question: \"Who would not find it rational to believe in the unknown, such as God, for example?\"\nContext: \"Philosophical empiricists hold no knowledge to be properly inferred or deduced unless it is derived from one's sense-based experience. This view is commonly contrasted with rationalism, which states that knowledge may be derived from reason independently of the senses. For example, John Locke held that some knowledge (e.g. knowledge of God's existence) could be arrived at through intuition and reasoning alone. Similarly Robert Boyle, a prominent advocate of the experimental method, held that we have innate ideas. The main continental rationalists (Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz) were also advocates of the empirical \"scientific method\".\"\nAnswer:", "completion": "Philosophical empiricists"}
{"prompt": "Question: \"What would one not be using when holding a belief in the afterlife, for example?\"\nContext: \"Philosophical empiricists hold no knowledge to be properly inferred or deduced unless it is derived from one's sense-based experience. This view is commonly contrasted with rationalism, which states that knowledge may be derived from reason independently of the senses. For example, John Locke held that some knowledge (e.g. knowledge of God's existence) could be arrived at through intuition and reasoning alone. Similarly Robert Boyle, a prominent advocate of the experimental method, held that we have innate ideas. The main continental rationalists (Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz) were also advocates of the empirical \"scientific method\".\"\nAnswer:", "completion": "senses"}
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment