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Test your basic knowledge |
DSST Ethics In America 2
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
dsst
,
civics
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Fostering good interpersonal relationships - thinkers take the needs and interests of others into account - it is important to make others happy
covenant
Thomas Hobbes
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Stage 3
2. Morality depends on religious belief or on a set of values given by a religion
Descriptive ethics
Stage 6
Ignorance
heteronomy
3. Disclosing relevant information regardng a medical diagnosis or treatment
primary purpose of the Leviathan
autonomy
Jeremy Bentham
disclosure of information
4. There is moral significance in the fundamental elements of relationships and dependencies in human life (care-givers)
Ethics of care
Immanuel Kant
Consent Form
disclosure of information
5. The study of ends or final causes or purposes that things serve
virtues
teleology
Stage 4
disclosure of information
6. Evaluates people's actions and their moral character (it is concerned with the content of moral judgments or principles - rules - or theories that guide our actions and judgments - and the criteria for what is right or wrong- it argues for particular
nonconsequentialist normative theory
In nature - everything has a purpose; nature and its moral laws are knowable through common sense and reason; since every living thing has a nature that is appropriate to the kind of thing it is - failure to develop this nature to its fullest is an i
John Locke
normative ethics
7. Rights and Justice - concerned mostly with justice - being an ideal ethical thinker needs you to distance yourself from a situation to assess it clearly
natural virtues
Golden Mean
Stage 6
John Stuart Mill
8. Egoism and exchange relationships - thinking is based on self-interest and how it can be achieved within relationships
Stage 5
divine command theory
Puffery
Stage 2
9. View holds that the good for which all humans aspire is happiness - which is the activity of the soul
Puffery
Aristotle
John Stuart Mill
Leviathan
10. Competition over material good; general distrust; glory of powerful positions
Vices
Enchiridion
Stage 6
three natural reasons people fight according to Hobbes
11. Tell you what to do in order to achieve a particular goal
issues addressed in the History of the Peloponnesian War
four roles of political philosophy according to rawls
heteronomy
hypothetical imperatives
12. Morality and religion are thought to come from a common source of inspiration and knowledge - a source that religion may refer to as God
theonomy
Puffery
paternalism
components of informed consent
13. The view that there exists an eternal moral law that can be discovered through reason by looking at the nature of humanity and society
John Rawls
Natural Law Theory
Consent Form
normative ethics
14. Plato believed the organization of the soul of a good person is similiar to this
Stage 3
Kant
Organization of social classes in an ideal society
Act utilitarianism
15. According to Socrates this is the sufficient condition to the good life
Hedonistic Utilitarianism
Socrates
Self-knowledge
Puffery
16. Applied to determine on what basis scarce resources will be distributed or alternatively on what basis burdens will be distributed
Socrates
Stoic philosphy
justice
Doctrine of Virtue
17. Believed that moral justification came from utility and good institutions produce good consequences (Hedonistic Utilitarianism)
Stage 3
Eternal law
Jeremy Bentham
Ethics of care
18. Claim that only pleasure or pain motivate us - most significant form of psychological hedonism
seven features of pleasure
motivational hedonism
Doctrine of Right
conditional covenant
19. An action is morally obligatory if it produces the most good for the most people
In nature - everything has a purpose; nature and its moral laws are knowable through common sense and reason; since every living thing has a nature that is appropriate to the kind of thing it is - failure to develop this nature to its fullest is an i
Act utilitarianism
Utilitarianism
Ethics
20. A relative mean between extremes of excess and deficiency - ini general a life of moderation in all things except virtue
Moral virtue
Self-knowledge
divine command theory
normative ethics
21. Interference of an individual with another person - against their will - and defended that the person interfered with will be better off or protected from harm
Doctrine of Right
paternalism
Epictetus
The Gospels
22. Descriptive - normative - meta-ethics
justice
John Rawls
Socrates
The 3 branches of ethics
23. Name the four authors of the Gospels
primary purpose of the Leviathan
Socrates
Matthew - Mark - Luke - and John
Happiness
24. An american philosopher in the liberal tradition - had theory of justice as fairness
hypothetical imperatives
normative hedonism
John Rawls
justice
25. People think of their duties towards others in terms of abstract rules that transcend the particular cultures of historical situations that specific people find themselves in (stages 5 & 6 of Kohlberg's hierarchy)
Post conventional level
normative hedonism
The Books of Law
Golden Mean
26. Actions are right in proportion as they tend to promote happiness
Standard of Happiness
Act utilitarianism
Matthew - Mark - Luke - and John
Jeremy Bentham
27. Consent is the basis of government - people have agreed to be ruled that governments are entitled to rule
Golden Mean
artificial virtues
conflict of interest
social contract theory
28. Founder of Liberalism - believed that everybody must be moved by a desire for his or her own happiness or pleasure.
John Locke
social contract theory
Thucydides
Descriptive ethics
29. Evidence of a valid consent
Consent Form
Pre-conventional level
motivational hedonism
five general principles the 15 laws of nature come from
30. Student of Socrates who suggested the good life is one of intelligence
John Rawls
Immanuel Kant
Plato
normative hedonism
31. Social Contracts - think in terms of laws because of majority agreements
Stage 5
Organization of social classes in an ideal society
conflict of interest
Stage 1
32. Believes that all acts are ultimately self-serving - even when they seem benevolent - that in a state of nature - prior to any formation of government - humans would behave completely selfishly
Kant
Socrates
Thomas Hobbes
conditional covenant
33. This lays the groundwork for normative ethics - it deals with the nature of moral judgment. It looks at the origins of meaning of ethical principles. It studies the nature of morality and questions the abstract meaning of ethical terms
stoic moral virtues
Hedonistic Utilitarianism
Utilitarianism
meta-ethics
34. Selfishness and lack of concern for other (contains first two stages of Kohlberg's hierarchy)
Vices
virtues
Pre-conventional level
Virtue ethics
35. Claims that humans are naturally self-interested and they are not naturally selfish or motivated by pride
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
social contract theory
Self-knowledge
Ethics of care
36. Disclosing information to outside sources without permission of the company regarding unethical practices
Whistle blowing
normative hedonism
distributive justice
Socrates
37. Hold that choices and/or acts or intentions are to be morally assessed solely by the states of affairs they bring about
Act utilitarianism
consequentialists
three natural reasons people fight according to Hobbes
rule utilitarianism
38. Former slave who received an education in the doctrine of Stoic philosophy - believed ethical wisdom can be obtained by keeping a moral purpose in harmony with nature
Standards of disclosure
Stage 1
Epictetus
Aristotle
39. Written by Hobbes - morality consists of Laws of Nature
Ethics
Leviathan
justice
Stage 6
40. Making exagerated claims about products
Hedonistic Utilitarianism
normative hedonism
Utilitarianism
Puffery
41. Prudence - courage - justice - temperance
Doctrine of Virtue
rule utilitarianism
teleology
stoic moral virtues
42. A contract or agreement between two parties to complete a task
covenant
Ignorance
John Rawls
primary purpose of the Leviathan
43. Envisions a society of free citizens holding equal basic rights of cooperating within an egalitarian economic system
theory of justice as fairness
Moral virtue
Jeremy Bentham
Conventional level
44. Includes a good habit - a mean - and a disposition to act within reason
Stage 6
Stoic philosphy
Virtue
normative hedonism
45. An agreement that is binding on both parties for its fulfillment
Kohlberg's six stages of moral development
issues addressed in the History of the Peloponnesian War
conditional covenant
autonomy
46. A generalized blueprint for the kind of entity you are
corrective justice
Stage 1
human nature
Ignorance
47. Duties that form this subject matter are precise - owed to specifiable others - and can be legally enforced
Genesis -Exodus - Leviticus - Numbers - Deuteronomy
Doctrine of Right
stoic moral virtues
human nature
48. Genuin care for others (stages 3 and 4 of Kohlberg's hierarchy)
Doctrine of Virtue
Utilitarianism
Hedonistic Utilitarianism
Conventional level
49. Maintains that moral values are relative to our natural human feelings and the urgent needs real situations - our ction should be guided by our feeling good about ourselves while promoting social well-being. Experiences of morality drawn from peoples
unconditional
David Hume
Plato
Thucydides
50. Bad character traits
Jeremy Bentham
Vices
Organization of social classes in an ideal society
Golden Mean