menu question 1 question 2 question 3 matching main menu to exit: press escape practice quiz chapter...
TRANSCRIPT
Menu
Question 1Question 2Question 3Matching
MAINMENU
To Exit:Press Escape
Practice QuizChapter 5
Moral Knowledge
Menu
1. The difference between moral intuition and knowledge is BEST expressed by which of the following: a. moral knowledge is learned whereas moral intuition is not.
b. both concern the formulation of rules, but intuition concerns particular rules, while knowledge is concerned with principles.
c. moral knowledge has no affective component, whereas intuition does.
d. moral intuition is more the result of enculturation and tutoring through traditions and institutions, while moral knowledge is the result of reflective and deliberate reasoning processes that seek to justify a principle on purely rational grounds.
Menu
INCORRECT
TRY AGAIN
Link here to Tutorial on Intuition
Rationale: Moral intuitions are also learned, althoughthe learning process may be different in each.
Menu
INCORRECT
TRY AGAIN
Rationale: Moral knowledge can be about both rulesand principles. One may also have moral intuitionsabout principles.
Link here to Tutorial on Intuition
Menu
INCORRECT
TRY AGAIN
Rationale: although moral intuitions may have moreaffective features than knowledge, strong beliefs gainedthrough moral knowledge will also have affectiveaspects.
Link here to Tutorial on Intuition
Menu
CORRECT
Next QUESTION
Menu
2. Justifying an action by appealing to its legality or that it is a belief held by most people, would be a kind of reasoning reflective of which level in Kohlberg's stages of moral reasoning:
a. preconventional
b. conventional
c. post-conventional
d. intuitive
Menu
INCORRECT
TRY AGAIN
Link here to Tutorial on Kohlberg’s Stages of Moral Reasoning
Rationale: Justifications associated with the pre-conventional stage are usually related to personalpunishment and reward criteria
Menu
INCORRECT
TRY AGAIN
Rationale: Justifications associated with the postconventional stage often involve looking beyondexisting laws or moral conventions for justification.
Link here to Tutorial on Kohlberg’s Stages of Moral Reasoning
Menu
INCORRECT
TRY AGAIN
Rationale: there is no such stage in Kohlberg’s theory.
Link here to Tutorial on Kohlberg’s Stages of Moral Reasoning
Menu
CORRECT
Next QUESTION
Menu
3. According to S. Carter, a person with integrity must meet all of the following conditions EXCEPT:
a. a person must have a sense of what is right and
wrong, a moral code.
b. a person must have a code which conforms to the conventional code of the group.
c. a person must be willing to act on one's moral code, even at personal cost.
d. a person must publicly advocate this moral code.
Menu
INCORRECT
TRY AGAIN
Link here to Tutorial on Integrity
Rationale: this is an essential condition of integrity. Tohave integrity, one must have a moral code to standby.
Menu
INCORRECT
TRY AGAIN
Rationale: this is an essential condition of integrity. Tohave integrity, one must be willing to stand by one’scode, even if it appears to disadvantage or endangeryou.
Link here to Tutorial on Integrity
Menu
INCORRECT
TRY AGAIN
Rationale: this is an essential condition of integrity. Tohave integrity, people must know what you stand for.
Link here to Tutorial on Integrity
Menu
CORRECT
Next QUESTION
Menu
A. Egoism (consequentialist)B. Egoism (deontological)C. Libertarian PrincipleD. The Categorical ImperativeE. The Dialogic PrincipleF. Tit-for-Tat PrincipleG. UtilitarianismH. The Natural LawI. The Golden Rule
5. Act as if the maxim of your action were to become a universal law.
1. I am a law unto myself.
MATCHING
6. Do unto others as you would have others do unto you.
7. Do what benefits you regardless of whether it harms or benefits others.
2. Do good, avoid evil.
8. Act to create the greatest happiness for the greatest number.
3. Return good with good, and harm with harm.
4. Do unto others as all of you can agree to do to one another.
9. Do what benefits you so long as it does not harm another.
A
A
A
A
B
B
B
B
B
C
C
C
D
D
E
E
F
F
G
G
G H
H
H
I
I
I D
E
F
F
G
B
E
I
C
Menu
INCORRECT
TRY AGAIN
Egoism (consequentialist)
Egoism (deontological)
TUTORIALS
Libertarian principle
The Categorical Imperative
The Dialogic Principle
Tit-for-Tat Principle
Utilitarianism
The Natural Law
The Golden Rule
Menu
CORRECT
Next Question
Menu
CORRECT
Next Question