Krisha Johnson
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Philosophy Test sobre Ethics Test 2 Study Guide, creado por Krisha Johnson el 02/10/2016.

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Ethics Test 2 Study Guide

Pregunta 1 de 41

1

Kant’s view is like rule utilitarianism in that

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • both believe that human happiness is an essential component of what is morally right or wrong

  • both believe that the formulation of rules is an important part of moral reasoning

  • both believe we can be certain about the moral rules we use

  • all of the above

Explicación

Pregunta 2 de 41

1

According to Kant, it is always wrong to treat a person as a means

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 3 de 41

1

On Kant’s view, telling a person the truth sometimes treats that person merely as a means if the truth is hurtful

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 4 de 41

1

Treating a person better than he or she deserves treats that person as an end by recognizing the intrinsic value of that person

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 5 de 41

1

Which of the following is a correct formulation of Kant’s Categorical Imperative?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Act only on that maxim through which you can at the same time desire that it become a universal law

  • So act as to treat humanity, whether yourself or others, in every case as an end withal, never as a means.

  • People always act on the maxim they can at the same time will that they should become a universal law

  • All of the above

  • None of the above

Explicación

Pregunta 6 de 41

1

On Kant’s view:

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • we know that lying promises are wrong because of our universal experience of the pain such things bring

  • we know that lying promises are wrong but future experience might prove us wrong

  • all moral imperatives are hypothetical imperatives

  • All of the above

  • None of the above

Explicación

Pregunta 7 de 41

1

Kant’s view is an abolitionist view

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 8 de 41

1

One of the problems for Kant’s view is that a moral absolute such as “Always tell the truth” might conflict with the moral absolute, “Always preserve innocent life.” If morals are absolutes and absolutes can conflict, there may be no correct answer as to what to do in some cases.

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 9 de 41

1

If a person does what is right out of love for humanity, that person’s act has great moral worth, according to Kant

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 10 de 41

1

If a person does the right thing because reason says to do it, the act has no moral worth unless the person is motivated by love of humanity

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 11 de 41

1

The object of On Liberty is to assert one very simple principle, according to Mill. What is that principle?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • The Principle of Utility

  • The Categorical Imperative

  • The Harm Principle

  • The Liberty Principle

Explicación

Pregunta 12 de 41

1

According to the principle defended in On Liberty,

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • We are never allowed to interfere in a person’s liberty

  • We are permitted to interfere with a person’s liberty on paternalistic grounds

  • We are never allowed to interfere with an individual’s liberty on paternalistic grounds

  • None of the above

Explicación

Pregunta 13 de 41

1

Mill argues that the reason we are free is that we are born with inalienable rights, one of them being the right to liberty

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 14 de 41

1

What does Mill mean by “utility” in On Liberty?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Utility in its lowest sense, consisting only in the total quantity of pleasure for all affected.

  • Utility in its largest sense, grounded on the permanent interests of man as a progressive being

  • He means that we are born with inalienable natural rights

Explicación

Pregunta 15 de 41

1

If a controversial view is true and the majority believes that the contrary view is false, the controversial view should not be allowed because it will make the majority unhappy, according to Mill.

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 16 de 41

1

If a view is false and offensive to the greatest number, it should not be allowed because of the pain it will produce

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 17 de 41

1

Which of the following is true regarding Mill’s view on the liberty of action?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • We are free to do only those actions that promote the greatest good for the greatest number

  • We are free to do anything at all we want to do

  • We are free to do anything we choose so long as it does not harm others

  • None of the above

Explicación

Pregunta 18 de 41

1

Does Mill think we should be able to do things that hurt ourselves if they only hurt ourselves?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Yes, because Mill hated people and hoped they would kill themselves

  • No, because when persons hurt themselves, even if they hurt only themselves, the amount of pain in the world increases.

  • Yes, because allowing people to choose for themselves in an indispensable element in utility in the largest sense grounded on the permanent interests of man as a progressive being

  • None of the above

Explicación

Pregunta 19 de 41

1

What is Mill’s view of what he calls “experiments in living?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • They should be allowed only if they provide the greatest good for the greatest number

  • They should be allowed (if people want to try them) so that we can progress

  • Experience has shown that new ways of living produce more harm than good

Explicación

Pregunta 20 de 41

1

According to Mill, unless a view is defended fully, frequently, and fearlessly

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • it will be held as a dead dogma, not as a living truth

  • it will be held in the manner of a prejudice with little comprehension or feeling of its rational grounds

  • the meaning of the doctrine itself will be in danger of being lost, or enfeebled, and deprived of its vital effect on the character and conduct

  • All of the above

Explicación

Pregunta 21 de 41

1

Mill argues that in every conceivable case, utility is maximized by allowing a view to be promoted rather than by suppressing that view. How many conceivable cases are there?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • 1

  • 2

  • 3

  • There are an infinite number of cases.

Explicación

Pregunta 22 de 41

1

One of the problems raised against utilitarianism concerns justice. What is the problem?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • It is well known that utilitarians are unjust by nature

  • Actions don’t have consequences after all

  • If an unjust act promotes more utility than a just act, utilitarianism seems to say the unjust act is the right act

  • It is not just for people to be happy

Explicación

Pregunta 23 de 41

1

According to rule utilitarianism, the government ought to rule its people harshly to promote the greater good

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 24 de 41

1

Which of the following are raised as objections to utilitarianism?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Violating a person’s rights might promote the greatest good for the greatest number

  • Enslaving a small minority might promote the greatest good for the greatest number

  • Punishing the innocent might promote the greatest good for the greatest number

  • All of the above

Explicación

Pregunta 25 de 41

1

Act utilitarianism is sometimes called indirect utilitarianism because actions have consequences only indirectly

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 26 de 41

1

According to rule utilitarianism:

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • We ought to promote the greatest good for the greatest number with each act we do

  • We ought to rule over those who care about self-interest alone

  • We ought to obey the rule that would promote the greatest good for the greatest number

  • All of the above

Explicación

Pregunta 27 de 41

1

How are we to choose which rules are best, according to rule utilitarianism?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Rules should be selected from holy books

  • Rules should be selected by reason alone

  • Rules should be selected by experience

  • All of the above

Explicación

Pregunta 28 de 41

1

According to rule utilitarianism, moral rules are intrinsically valuable

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 29 de 41

1

We concluded in class that rule utilitarianism can meet important objections raised against act utilitarianism

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 30 de 41

1

Unlike ethical relativism, which has found little favor among philosophers, many philosophers have thought utilitarianism a plausible theory.

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 31 de 41

1

According to Rule Utilitarianism, justice is intrinsically valuable

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 32 de 41

1

Kant’s view is a rationalist view. That means Kant believes that all moral knowledge comes through experience?

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 33 de 41

1

On Kant’s view, moral truths can be known with certainty?

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 34 de 41

1

Kant’s view is deontological. That means that it is rooted in religious duty rather than consequences?

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 35 de 41

1

Which of the following is an imperative?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • People always act on the maxim they can will to be a universal law

  • Treating humanity, whether yourself or others, always as an end and never as a means only is right

  • Act only on the maxim you could will to be a universal law

  • All of the above

Explicación

Pregunta 36 de 41

1

According to Kant, the only thing good in itself is

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Pleasure

  • Happiness

  • The Good Will

  • All of the above

Explicación

Pregunta 37 de 41

1

A will is a good will if and only if it sincerely desires to do the right thing and always acts according to that desire

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 38 de 41

1

If a person does the right thing by keeping a promise, that act has no moral worth if it is done solely out of love for the person, on Kant’s view

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 39 de 41

1

A hypothetical imperative is in the form, “If you want X, then do Y!”

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 40 de 41

1

Kant thought moral imperatives are hypothetical imperatives?

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 41 de 41

1

A good will, according to Kant, is the will that chooses according to reason and is not swayed by desire.

Selecciona uno de los siguientes:

  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación