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Philosophy
Q:
If Chant maintains that killing the innocent is wrong because the action is contrary to God's
will, she probably accepts the
a. natural command theory. c. divine command theory.
b. divine imperative theory. d. natural law theory.
Q:
Those who believe that nature possesses instrumental value only are likely to believe that a
forest has value only because of its economic worth.
Q:
The morality of persons getting what is fair or what is their due is known as ________.
Q:
A moral theory would fail to meet the minimum requirement of coherence if
a. it fails to cohere with considered moral judgments.
b. it states that the same action in the same conditions is both right and wrong.
c. it fails to cohere with common cultural practices.
d. it states that some widely practiced actions are in fact wrong.
Q:
Suppose environmentalists want to prevent the disappearance of glaciers in Glacier National
Park, which are melting away at an alarming rate. One report claims that slowing global
warming can help prevent the melting, which would be accomplished by creating better fuel
efficiency for cars and stronger energy efficiency standards for buildings and appliances.
Laws passed to implement these higher standards would necessarily reflect a belief that
glaciers have moral status.
Q:
A persons right that obligates others NOT to interfere with that persons obtaining something is known as a ________.
Q:
Many egalitarians maintain that we are not obligated to share our resources with those less fortunate.
Q:
According to Kant, the principle and the maxims derived from the categorical imperative are
a. consequentialist and rule based. c. universal and absolutist.
b. nonconsequentialist and egoistic. d. universal and consequential.
Q:
To some, the fact that we value the beauty of Niagara Falls shows that we
a. value the natural over the artificial.
b. sometimes value the artificial over the natural.
c. dont really value nature.
d. think unnatural things are worthless.
Q:
Peter Singer asserts that our moral duty applies to needy people regardless of their distance from us.
Q:
To a(n) ________, breaking promises is wrong because if the implied rule were universalized
(if everyone followed the rule), then no promise anywhere could be trusted and the whole
convention of promise making would be obliterated. Thus no one would be willing to live in
such a world.
a. egoist c. Kantian
b. utilitarian d. categorical theorist
Q:
A counterexample to biocentric egalitarianism is that we
a. know that killing a cow is no worse than killing a carrot.
b. think that killing a cow is no worse and no better than killing a carrot.
c. assume vegetables have the same moral status as primates.
d. tend to believe that killing a cow is worse than killing a carrot.
Q:
The failure of rich nations to aid the worlds poorest countries would be considered morally
wrong by Peter Singer.
Q:
A traditional natural law theorist would say that lying is immoral because it
a. violates the categorical imperative. c. goes against the Ten Commandments.
b. uses people as a means to an end. d. goes against human nature.
Q:
Which of the following BEST describes a similarity between consequentialist theories and nonconsequentialist theories?
a. They are not primarily about evaluating persons as good or bad.
b. They both focus on producing as much good as possible.
c. They both allow each individual to decide what is right for them.
d. They agree that breaking promises is always wrong.
Q:
The controversy over the ivory-billed woodpecker has pitted those who want to build a massive irrigation project against environmentalists who want to stop the project to protect the woodpecker and other species. A biocentric species egalitarian would probably insist that the a. project be completed but with rigid safeguards to protect all sentient beings. b. project be completed to maximize the welfare of humans. c. project be curtailed (but not stopped) to promote the interests of humans and the ivory-billed woodpecker only. d. project be stopped to protect the ivory-billed woodpecker and all the other species of plants and animals.
Q:
Which anthropocentric philosopher said, Animals . . . are there merely as means to an end.
That end is man?
a. Immanuel Kant c. Paul Taylor
b. Thomas Aquinas d. Tom Regan
Q:
Suppose your friend is a strong believer in individual liberties and negative rights, and she often
complains about the governments establishment of positive rights. It sounds like she may be a
utilitarian.
Q:
The theory asserting that the morally right action is the one covered by a rule that if generally
followed would produce the most favorable balance of good over evil, everyone considered, is
a. rule-egoism. c. rule-Kantian.
b. act-utilitarianism. d. rule-utilitarianism.
Q:
According to Peter Singer, the pain suffered by a human is ________ important than that
experienced by a nonhuman animal.
a. no more c. more
b. less d. slightly less
Q:
Suppose you adopt a libertarian theory of justice. The government decides to raise taxes to pay for universal health care. You will likely oppose these new taxes.
Q:
If John always acts to produce the most favorable balance of good over evil for himself,
he is probably
a. a utilitarian. c. a nonconsequentialist.
b. an ethical egoist. d. a divine command theorist.
Q:
Which philosopher maintains that we must include the interests of all sentient creatures and
give their interests equal weight when calculating which action will produce the greatest
overall satisfaction of interests?
a. David Hume c. Thomas Aquinas
b. Aldo Leopold d. Peter Singer
Q:
If Peter Singers zoocentrist view is correct, then the practice of ________ would be impermissible.
a. leaving animals alone in the wild c. factory farming
b. grooming pets d. animal conservation
Q:
In 2009, Kenya faced an immediate danger of mass starvation due to a drought that threatened a third of the East African countrys population, or about 10 million people. In January of that year, the Kenyan government declared the food shortage a national disaster, and the United Nations appealed for international help. Suppose wealthy countries responded to the food crisis in Kenya according to Garrett Hardins recommendations. Rich countries would have a. sent limited food aid. c. sent more food aid than is required. b. sent fertilizer but no food. d. refused to send any food aid at all.
Q:
A consequentialist theory may define the good as
a. adherence to a moral code.
b. doing one's duty for duty's sake.
c. obedience to moral laws.
d. pleasure, happiness, well-being, or flourishing.
Q:
If you were a species nonegalitarian, you would likely believe that
a. the question of moral status is irrelevant.
b. an elk has greater moral status than a potato.
c. elk and potatoes have equal moral status.
d. elk and potatoes have no moral status.
Q:
The richest 1 percent of people in the world own about 50 percent of the worlds wealth.
Q:
A person who reasons that the morally right action is the one that produces the most favorable
balance of good over evil, everyone considered, is a(n)
a. utilitarian. c. rule-Kantian.
b. ethical egoist. d. natural law theorist.
Q:
The questions of whether an ape has the same moral status as a domestic cow and if animals
(human and nonhuman) deserve the same level of moral concern as plants concern the
issue(s) of
a. centrism and noncentrism.
b. ecological individualism.
c. holism.
d. species egalitarianism or nonegalitarianism.
Q:
A persons claim or entitlement to something, a moral demand that obligates others to act
accordingly, is referred to as a duty.
Q:
Garrett Hardin argues that the rich
a. should aid the poor and hungry but not to the level of marginal utility.
b. should not aid the poor and hungry because doing so will only invite catastrophe for the rich and poor alike.
c. should not aid the poor and hungry because doing so will result in injustice to the rich.
d. should aid the poor and hungry because Peter Singers argument is persuasive.
Q:
Choose the statement that BEST summarizes the purposes of moral theories.
a. Moral theories support and provide detail to traditional moral codes, thereby making moral codes easier to defend against objections.
b. Moral theories explain the meaning of moral language and the sources of our knowledge of moral truths.
c. Moral theories explain moral rightness and give us practical guidance on how to act, even in difficult cases where moral codes do not apply.
d. Moral theories explain people's behavior and motivations, thereby allowing us to understand historical events better and predict future behavior.
Q:
Suppose you are the last human on a dead planet. Only one other living thing existsa maple
tree. You are preparing to leave the planet for good, and you are debating with yourself about
whether you should kill the tree before departing. In the end, you decide it would be morally
impermissible to kill the tree. Your reluctance to kill the tree shows that the tree has
a. no moral status. c. moral status.
b. instrumental value. d. aesthetic value.
Q:
Consider the story of Malawis transformation from a country that needed emergency food
aid to one that feeds its hungry neighbors. The soil in Malawi was overfarmed and depleted,
which made it impossible for the country to feed itself. The situation improved only when
Malawi began to ignore the advice of the World Bank and rich countries, which, in trying to
provide aid, had advised Malawi to get rid of fertilizer subsidies and to rely on the workings of
free markets. After the disastrous harvest of 2005, Malawi reversed the trend and subsidized
farmers use of fertilizer, just as many Western countries do for their own farmers. The
Malawi governments decision resulted in a complete turnaround of its peoples situation. This
example would lend most support to the view of ________.
a. Garrett Hardin c. John Arthur
b. Peter Singer d. Louis Pojman
Q:
A moral theory is ________ on an issue such as euthanasia.
a. an account of common practices c. not useful
b. the final authority d. a guide for moral reasoning
Q:
An anthropocentrist sees animals, plants, and ecosystems as
a. moral equals along with humans. c. means to unifying all life.
b. more natural than human beings. d. means to serve the ends of human beings.
Q:
Garrett Hardin uses the lifeboat metaphor to suggest that
a. affluent countries, like lifeboats, are inherently unstable.
b. the moral duty of affluent countries is to give aid to the starving, overpopulated ones.
c. the affluent countries have a moral duty not to give aid to the starving, overpopulated ones.
d. giving aid to the poor and hungry will cause a worldwide revolt against the rich and influential.
Q:
Which of the following BEST summarizes consequentialist theories?
a. Consequentialist theories rate actions by how consequential or important they are, with more consequential actions being better.
b. Consequentialist theories consider actions to be good when they produce good consequences. Different consequentialist theories specify different kinds of consequences as being good consequences.
c. Consequentialist theories consider actions to be good when most persons believe they are good, even if other persons disagree about what is good.
d. Consequentialist theories remind us that actions have consequences, and so they support punishment for morally wrong actions, with no exceptions.
Q:
According to Peter Singer, those who do not give equal moral consideration to both human and nonhuman animals are guilty of ________.
Q:
Suppose you strongly believe you have no duty to help the poor and hungry of the world and that
you are not obligated to share your resources with those less fortunate. Your view would be
consistent with
a. authoritarianism. c. libertarianism.
b. utilitarianism. d. egalitarianism.
Q:
According to Peter Singers theory, we (the affluent) ought to give to the needy up to the point where we are just better off than those we are trying to help. Singer refers to this as ________.
a. egalitarian justice. c. the level of sufficient sacrifice.
b. the level of marginal utility. d. distributive justice.
Q:
The key premise in Peter Singers argument for aiding the worlds needy is
a. [I]f it is in our power to equally distribute goods throughout the world to all persons,
we ought, morally, to do it.
b. Wethe well-to-dohave no right at all to the goods we possess; we acquired
them mostly through accidents of birth and geography.
c. Giving food and shelter to the poor would only make their plight worse.
d. [I]f it is in our power to prevent something bad from happening, without thereby sacrificing anything of comparable moral importance, we ought, morally, to do it.
Q:
In disputes about environmental issues, often there is substantial agreement on the nonmoral
facts and serious divergence on
a. nonmoral principles. c. technical issues.
b. nonmoral issues or judgments. d. moral principles or judgments.
Q:
Critics of Peter Singers view admit that we do have an obligation to aid distant people but,
they say, we also have a duty to help
a. those with whom we have a special relationship.
b. everyone near us.
c. our enemies.
d. foreign governments.
Q:
A moral theory is
a. more useful than a moral code. c. a moral code.
b. a set of rules. d. less useful than a moral code.
Q:
What is the fallacy used in the following passage? Liberals believe in abortion on demand,
which means that killing a baby is permissible any time at allat conception, in the second
trimester, at infancy. Any of these would be appropriate times to kill a baby, says the liberal.
a. appeal to the person c. straw man
b. begging the question d. equivocation
Q:
Something with intrinsic value is valuable
a. for someone elses sake. c. as a means to something else.
b. for the sake of the environment. d. for its own sake.
Q:
Today almost no one believes, as ________ did, that animals are equivalent to windup clocks, mechanisms without feelings.
Q:
What is the fallacy used in the following passage? John argues that active euthanasia is
sometimes morally acceptable. But we can reject out of hand anything he has to say because
he's an ultraconservative.
a. equivocation c. appeal to authority
b. begging the question d. appeal to the person
Q:
When an animal is entitled to a kind of moral respect that cannot be overridden (or cannot be overridden easily), it is said to have ________.
Q:
The fallacy of drawing a conclusion about an entire group of people or things based on an undersized sample of the group is known as a. hasty generalization. c. slippery slope. b. begging the question. d. faulty analogy.
Q:
The philosopher ________ helped engender the animal rights movement by arguing that
something was very wrong with the traditional attitude toward animals and their treatment.
Q:
The moral issue of whether we have a duty to help the poor and hungry of the world is compelling mainly because the
a. news media constantly remind us of the plight of poor people.
b. worlds poor are now slightly better off than they used to be, which is a reminder of their plight.
c. wretchedness of the worlds poor is an exaggeration that the rich are often confronted with.
d. wretchedness of the worlds poor is profound and the economic gap between rich and poor is wide.
Q:
For both Jeremy Bentham and Peter Singer, what makes a being worthy of moral concern,
what requires us to include it in the moral community, is its ability to ________.
Q:
Robert Nozick and John Hospers believe that people have a right NOT to be interfered with
and to do whatever they want with their own property as long as they do not violate the liberty
rights of others. This line is clearly
a. utilitarian. c. libertarian.
b. liberal. d. egalitarian.
Q:
________ is the view that wealthy nations able to ease the suffering of the worlds poor and
oppressed have a moral obligation to do so, and that this obligation is as strong concerning a
nations own citizens as it is concerning foreigners.
Q:
What is the fallacy used in the following passage? If marijuana is legalized, young people will
assume that smoking marijuana is socially acceptable. That will lead them to give into the
temptation to smoke marijuana themselves, and smoking marijuana can ruin their lives.
Therefore, marijuana should not be legalized.
a. straw man c. appeal to the person
b. slippery slope d. appeal to ignorance
Q:
Mary Anne Warren says that human lives have greater intrinsic value than animal lives
because human lives are worth more to their possessors.
Q:
Cosmopolitan ________ contend that everyone, including both compatriots and noncitizens,
is entitled to equal moral rights and consideration and that allowing open borders is the key to
eliminating the vast economic inequalities in the world.
Q:
What is the fallacy used in the following passage? No one can prove that a fetus is not a
person from the moment of conception. So, a fetus must be accorded full moral rights as soon
as it is conceived.
a. appeal to ignorance c. slippery slope
b. appeal to the person d. faulty analogy
Q:
Animal rights activists waged a highly effective campaign against the practice of seal hunting, an activity that constituted the heart of Canadian Inuit culture and identity. The campaign devastated the Inuit economy and created a host of health, social, and cultural problems for them. Thomas Aquinas would almost certainly have sided with the Inuit.
Q:
Someone who believes that wealthy nations able to ease the suffering of the worlds poor and oppressed have a moral obligation to do so, but that such nations also have moral obligations to their own citizens that may be weightier than those concerning foreigners, is referred to as a(n) ________.
Q:
In 1939 the United States turned away a ship carrying 900 German Jews persecuted by the Nazi regime, eventually resulting in the deaths of more than 250 of the refugees. A cosmopolitan egalitarian would have said this decision was morally acceptable, because refugees lack the same rights as citizens.
Q:
What is the implicit premise in the following moral argument? "The war did not increase the
amount of happiness in the world. So, the war was morally wrong."
a. If a war is immoral, it must be considered morally wrong.
b. If a war does not increase the amount of peace in the world, it must be considered morally wrong.
c. If a war does not increase the amount of happiness in the world, it must be considered morally wrong.
d. Some wars increase the amount of happiness in the world.
Q:
In order to be logically consistent, a person who believes that animals have rights would also
have to hold the view that animals have the same moral rights that humans do.
Q:
The term ________ is defined by the U.S. government as the formal removal of a foreign
national from the United States for violating an immigration law.
Q:
What is a possible counterexample to the following moral principle? Lying is always wrong.
a. Lying is morally wrong unless doing so will save a persons life.
b. Lying to cheat your friend out of money is morally wrong.
c. Lying to save yourself from embarrassment is wrong.
d. Lying is always morally wrong, even if doing so will save a persons life.
Q:
Consider the practice of scientific experimentation on animals, in which, for example, the
benefits gained from the research greatly outweigh the suffering involved. In this case, a
Singer utilitarian may want to condone the research, and a Regan animal rights advocate
would want to abolish the research.
Q:
The federal government refers to someone who has fled from his or her home country
and cannot return because he or she has a well-founded fear of persecution based on
religion, race, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group
as a(n) ________.
Q:
The fallacy of assigning two different meanings to the same term in an argument is known as
a. begging the question. c. straw man.
b. equivocation. d. appeal to ignorance.
Q:
Tom Regan argues that humans are experiencing subjects of a life; nonhuman animals
(normal, fully developed mammals) are nonexperiencing subjects of a life.
Q:
Those who hold the traditional attitude toward animals believe that cruelty to animals is bad, but only because the Bible explicitly speaks against it.
Q:
There is universal agreement on all sides of the immigration debate that that the need to
preserve a nations distinctive culture is a good reason to favor closed borders.
Q:
A moral statement is a
a. statement affirming that an action is bad or that a person is bad.
b. statement asserting a valid moral argument.
c. statement asserting that a state of affairs is actual (true or false) without assigning a moral value to it.
d. statement affirming that an action is right or wrong or that a person (or one's motive or character) is good or bad.
Q:
In 2015 and 2016 in the United States alone, more than 18 billion animals, including cows, pigs, sheep, and lambs, were slaughtered for food.
Q:
Libertarians argue for cosmopolitanism by pointing out that restricted immigration interferes
with a citizens right to allow foreigners to enter his or her property and infringes on a
foreigners right to freedom of movement.
Q:
A statement asserting that a state of affairs is actual (true or false) without assigning a moral
value to it is a
a. moral statement. c. valid statement.
b. nonmoral statement. d. strong statement.
Q:
Both Peter Singer and Jeremy Bentham hold that utilitarian calculations must take into account the pleasure and pain of all sentient creatures.
Q:
If its wrong to cage a human being, then its wrong to cage a nonhuman animal. Zoos that exist solely for the sake of entertaining visitors are wrong, as they keep nonhuman animals in cages against their will. This view is most likely to be held by a. Jeremy Bentham. c. Tom Regan. b. Mary Anne Warren. d. Ren Descartes.