Deck 8: Moral Theory

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Question
Midgley argues that we do, in fact, have the ability to understand and judge other cultures. Why does she think this is true? What do you think of her reasons?
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Question
Is it fair for members of another culture to criticize our culture? What does Midgley say about this? What do you think?
Question
How can you tell whether your opinion about another culture is crude or well informed?
Question
Moral isolationism is the view that we cannot make moral judgments about any culture other than our own.
Question
According to Midgley, moral isolationism is a respectful attitude to take toward other cultures.
Question
Midgley argues that a consistent moral isolationism would lead to a general ban on moral reasoning.
Question
According to Midgley, we understand other cultures well enough to praise them or want to learn from their good qualities.
Question
Midgley argues that before we try to judge other cultures, we should start by properly judging our own.
Question
Midgley argues that if we cannot judge other cultures, then we cannot properly judge our own.
Question
One reason to think that we do understand other cultures is that many cultures form from a mixture of influences.
Question
When anthropologists study isolated societies, neither the anthropologists nor the subjects being studied are capable of making moral judgments about each other's culture.
Question
Moral isolationism is the view that we cannot

A) Make moral judgments about other people, only ourselves.
B) Make moral judgments about cultures other than our own.
C) Treat people from other cultures as moral equals.
D) Allow other cultures to influence our moral rules.
Question
In contrast to those who recommend it, Midgely claims that moral isolationism

A) Is not respectful.
B) Makes no sense.
C) Both a and b
D) Neither a nor b
Question
Midgley argues that moral isolationism is not respectful to other cultures because

A) You can't respect someone without understanding them at least a little.
B) Respecting someone means allowing them to influence you.
C) It means treating people from other cultures as outsiders.
D) It means treating people as if their moral thinking is paralyzed.
Question
Can people from other cultures criticize our culture according to Midgley?

A) No, you cannot reasonably criticize a culture you do not belong to.
B) Maybe; some cultures are more enlightened than others.
C) Yes, but their opinion is more informed as they become more familiar with it.
D) Yes, their opinion is immediately just as good as ours.
Question
Can we praise another culture according to Midgley?

A) No, praising other cultures is just as impossible as criticizing them.
B) No, our praise is worthless because it rests on grounds we don't understand.
C) Yes, we need to praise them and judge when we should learn from them.
D) Yes, but our opinions about other cultures are unavoidably crude.
Question
According to Midgley, judging involves

A) Forming an opinion and expressing it, if called for.
B) Dismissing entire cultures based on overly shallow reasons.
C) Praising and criticizing things we do not understand.
D) Sitting on a bench and sentencing people.
Question
Midgley mentions the example of a simple-minded missionary who dismisses samurai culture as bad because it is non-Christian. What does she think of this example?

A) The missionary's opinion is crude.
B) The missionary is an outsider to the culture and has no right to an opinion.
C) The missionary's opinion is just as legitimate as anyone else's.
D) As an outsider, the missionary has an advantage over locals.
Question
Midgley thinks that moral isolationism "would lay down a general ban on moral reasoning" because if we cannot judge other cultures, then

A) We cannot really understand morality in general.
B) We cannot judge the morality of actions.
C) We cannot judge individual humans.
D) We cannot judge our own culture by comparison.
Question
If moral isolationism were true, how does Midgley think we would feel about moral questions about other cultures?

A) Concerned, because we wouldn't know the answers.
B) Apathetic, because we would have no ability to form opinions.
C) Confident, because we would answer based on our own culture.
D) Confused, because we would not even understand the questions.
Question
According to Midgley, if an individual were to criticize the custom of another culture-for example, the Samurai "crossroads-cut"-a moral isolationist would likely respond by

A) Protesting that the individual has no right to criticize another culture.
B) Filling in the background to help the individual understand the custom.
C) Trying to change the individual's judgment of the custom.
D) All of the above.
Question
According to Midgley, when we judge another culture, we use

A) The moral standards of that culture.
B) Universal, culturally neutral moral standards.
C) Moral standards of a third culture.
D) The moral standards of our own culture.
Question
Midgley talks about cultures such as Britain being formed from mixtures of different influences. What point is she making here?

A) We don't really understand each other's cultures; we just blindly adopt bits and pieces of cultural influence.
B) We are not cultural isolationists, so we probably are not moral isolationists either.
C) If we judged each other moralistically, instead of living harmoniously, cultural mixing couldn't have happened.
D) If we couldn't understand each other's cultures, cultural mixing couldn't have happened.
Question
If moral isolationism were true, what would be most likely to happen when we encountered a new cultural influence?

A) It would have no impact because we would judge it as bad.
B) It would have no impact because we wouldn't understand it at all.
C) The unfamiliar culture would influence our own, even if we didn't understand it very well.
D) Our culture would influence the new one, but not vice versa.
Question
Midgley mentions anthropologists studying small remote societies. What point does she make about these cases?

A) The anthropologists and tribesmen were able to make judgments about each other's cultures.
B) The anthropologists and tribesmen didn't make any moral judgments about each other.
C) Doing anthropology means you don't make any moral judgments about the people you are observing.
D) The tribesmen refused to make moral judgments about the anthropologists' culture.
Question
What might anthropology be like if moral isolationism were true?

A) Anthropology would be just the same as it actually is.
B) Anthropologists could understand people in other cultures, but not judge them as good or bad people.
C) Anthropologists could describe the behavior of people in other cultures, but never really understand them.
D) There could be no anthropology of any kind if moral isolationism were true.
Question
Explain what Midgley means by "moral isolationism."
Question
Is praising another culture different from criticizing it? Is it okay to praise another culture but not to criticize it?
Question
Midgley asks, if we can't judge other cultures, can we really judge our own? How does she answer this question? Do you agree with her answer?
Kant's Ethics
Onora O'Neill
Question
Do you find the Formula of the End in Itself a plausible moral principle? Explain.
Question
What is a maxim, and how does it fit into Kant's moral theory?
Question
Why does Kant think that it is wrong to deceive others? Do you agree that this is the reason it is wrong? Explain.
Question
Kant claims that there is no one moral principle.
Question
According to Kant, it is always immoral to use someone as a means.
Question
Kant claims that we assess the moral status of an action on the basis of the maxim it expresses.
Question
In Kant's view, coercion is wrong because the person being coerced could not consent.
Question
Kant provides multiple formulations of the categorical imperative.
Question
According to O'Neil, Kant's moral theory has a reputation for being

A) Difficult to understand.
B) Demanding in its requirements.
C) Both a and b
D) Neither a nor b
Question
According to the Formula of the End in Itself, we must act in such a way that we always treat humanity

A) In a way that can be universalized.
B) Never simply as an end, but always at the same time as a means.
C) In a way that contributes to human happiness.
D) Never simply as a means, but always at the same time as an end.
Question
Kant calls his supreme principle of morality

A) The Hypothetical Imperative.
B) The Categorical Imperative.
C) The Principle of Utility.
D) Both a and
Question
The maxim of an action is

A) The principle on which the agent sees him- or herself as acting.
B) A statement of preference.
C) The consequence of an action.
D) Both a and
Question
An action is wrong, according to Kant, if

A) It causes unhappiness.
B) It treats someone as a means.
C) Its maxim treats someone as a mere means.
D) It has an end.
Question
According to Kant, we use a person as a mere means when

A) We manipulate the person.
B) We involve the person in an action to which he or she cannot in principle consent.
C) We deceive or coerce the person.
D) All of the above.
Question
According to Kant, it is not wrong to for one person to use another as a means when

A) Neither person consents to cooperation.
B) Each person consents to cooperation.
C) Maxims are not being followed.
D) None of the above.
Question
What is wrong, according to Kant, with coercing someone into doing something? Do you agree? Explain.
Question
Put the Formula of the End in Itself into your own words. Do you think that we can determine all right and wrong actions on the basis of this principle? Explain.
Question
Do you think there is a single moral principle? If so, what might it be? If not, why not?
Assessing Utilitarianism
Louis P. Pojman
Question
What do you think is the best objection to utilitarianism? Explain.
Question
Which is subject to more objections-act utilitarianism or rule utilitarianism? Or are they both subject to the same objections? Explain.
Question
Rule utilitarians claim that the right thing to do might not always, in that instance, produce the most good.
Question
The integrity objection to utilitarianism claims that one's deeply held projects and character traits are morally unimportant, given utilitarianism.
Question
The justice objection to utilitarianism claims that utilitarians worship justice as an absolute.
Question
Some think that utilitarianism is relativistic.
Question
Utilitarianism seems to counsel against resting.
Question
Pojman claims that utilitarianism, despite facing several problems, has two positive features: it is easy to apply and is not overly demanding.
Question
According to act utilitarianism, an act is right if and only if

A) It results in as much good as any available alternative.
B) It follows from a rule that is part of a system of rules that produces the most good.
C) It is universalizable.
D) The virtuous person would perform it.
Question
According to Pojman, the obvious criticism of act utilitarianism is that

A) We often lack the time to do calculations needed to determine which act is correct in each case.
B) It flies in the face of fundamental intuitions about minimally correct behavior.
C) Both a and b
D) Neither a nor b
Question
According to rule utilitarianism, an act is right if and only if

A) It results in as much good as any available alternative.
B) It follows from a rule that is part of a system of rules that produces the most good.
C) It is universalizable.
D) The virtuous person would perform it.
Question
The integrity objection to utilitarianism claims that

A) It is absurd.
B) It is relativistic.
C) It is too demanding.
D) All of the above.
Question
Utilitarianism claims that justice

A) Is morally important.
B) Is not absolute.
C) Is morally irrelevant.
D) Both a and b
Question
A utilitarian response to the Absurd-Implications Objection would be that

A) Justice is not an absolute.
B) We must be ready to change our cultural-induced biases.
C) Integrity is not an absolute.
D) Alienation helps devise strategies of action.
Question
Does utilitarianism entail that it is better to kill an innocent person to save the lives of twenty others? Explain.
Question
State an objection to utilitarianism that you think the rule utilitarian can answer but that the act utilitarian cannot. Explain why this is the case.
Question
Do you find utilitarianism attractive as a moral theory? Explain.
Virtue Ethics
Julia Driver
Question
What are three criticisms of virtue theory? How do you evaluate them?
Question
How does Aristotle's virtue ethics differ from Kant's duty ethics and Mill's utilitarianism? Explain.
Question
What is Aristotle's doctrine of the mean and how does it pertain to his virtue ethics?
Question
Current virtue ethicists take their inspiration mainly from the writings of Plato.
Question
Virtue ethics provides rules to guide human behavior.
Question
Aristotle believed that virtue is a mean state lying between two vices.
Question
According to Aristotle, a virtuous person experiences conflict between reason and passion.
Question
A major criticism of virtue ethics is that it does not provide a guide to action.
Question
Virtue ethics is based on

A) Universal maxims.
B) Rules that guide behavior.
C) The development of a person's character.
D) Abstract principles.
Question
For Aristotle, a good person is virtuous by

A) Following the rules of right action.
B) Embodying excellence in human character.
C) Maximizing the good for the greatest number of people.
D) Adhering to the Categorical Imperative.
Question
The doctrine of the mean states that

A) A virtue lies between two vices.
B) A virtue can be understood by itself.
C) There is no virtue in being mean.
D) One should always strive to be average.
Question
If "bravery" is the virtue, then

A) "Temperance" and "abstinence" are the vices.
B) "Excellence" and "failure" are the vices.
C) "Gluttony" and "abstinence are the vices.
D) "Cowardice" and "foolhardiness" are the vices.
Question
According to Aristotle, a "continent" person is someone who

A) Lives a harmonious life.
B) Suffers no inner turmoil.
C) Experiences conflict between actions and feelings.
D) Does not struggle between reason and passion.
Question
According to Aristotle, the person who acts rightly but feels badly about it is

A) Not virtuous.
B) Merely continent.
C) Both a and b
D) Neither a nor b
Question
Critics of virtue ethics claim that

A) It does not provide a guide for right action.
B) It fails to conform to what we know of human behavior.
C) It cannot tell us what to do in conflict situations.
D) All of the above.
Question
Virtue ethicists respond to the criticism that virtue ethics has trouble telling us the right thing to do in conflict situations by pointing out that

A) Morality is messy.
B) There may be more than one right answer to moral questions.
C) Ethical rules establish right action for every situation.
D) Both a and b
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Deck 8: Moral Theory
1
Midgley argues that we do, in fact, have the ability to understand and judge other cultures. Why does she think this is true? What do you think of her reasons?
good essay will:
State Midgley's reasons for arguing that we can understand and judge other cultures.
Address each of her reasons and assess their strengths and weaknesses by showing how well they provide support for her conclusion.
2
Is it fair for members of another culture to criticize our culture? What does Midgley say about this? What do you think?
No Answer
3
How can you tell whether your opinion about another culture is crude or well informed?
No Answer
4
Moral isolationism is the view that we cannot make moral judgments about any culture other than our own.
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5
According to Midgley, moral isolationism is a respectful attitude to take toward other cultures.
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6
Midgley argues that a consistent moral isolationism would lead to a general ban on moral reasoning.
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7
According to Midgley, we understand other cultures well enough to praise them or want to learn from their good qualities.
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8
Midgley argues that before we try to judge other cultures, we should start by properly judging our own.
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k this deck
9
Midgley argues that if we cannot judge other cultures, then we cannot properly judge our own.
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k this deck
10
One reason to think that we do understand other cultures is that many cultures form from a mixture of influences.
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k this deck
11
When anthropologists study isolated societies, neither the anthropologists nor the subjects being studied are capable of making moral judgments about each other's culture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Moral isolationism is the view that we cannot

A) Make moral judgments about other people, only ourselves.
B) Make moral judgments about cultures other than our own.
C) Treat people from other cultures as moral equals.
D) Allow other cultures to influence our moral rules.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
In contrast to those who recommend it, Midgely claims that moral isolationism

A) Is not respectful.
B) Makes no sense.
C) Both a and b
D) Neither a nor b
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Midgley argues that moral isolationism is not respectful to other cultures because

A) You can't respect someone without understanding them at least a little.
B) Respecting someone means allowing them to influence you.
C) It means treating people from other cultures as outsiders.
D) It means treating people as if their moral thinking is paralyzed.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Can people from other cultures criticize our culture according to Midgley?

A) No, you cannot reasonably criticize a culture you do not belong to.
B) Maybe; some cultures are more enlightened than others.
C) Yes, but their opinion is more informed as they become more familiar with it.
D) Yes, their opinion is immediately just as good as ours.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Can we praise another culture according to Midgley?

A) No, praising other cultures is just as impossible as criticizing them.
B) No, our praise is worthless because it rests on grounds we don't understand.
C) Yes, we need to praise them and judge when we should learn from them.
D) Yes, but our opinions about other cultures are unavoidably crude.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
According to Midgley, judging involves

A) Forming an opinion and expressing it, if called for.
B) Dismissing entire cultures based on overly shallow reasons.
C) Praising and criticizing things we do not understand.
D) Sitting on a bench and sentencing people.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Midgley mentions the example of a simple-minded missionary who dismisses samurai culture as bad because it is non-Christian. What does she think of this example?

A) The missionary's opinion is crude.
B) The missionary is an outsider to the culture and has no right to an opinion.
C) The missionary's opinion is just as legitimate as anyone else's.
D) As an outsider, the missionary has an advantage over locals.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Midgley thinks that moral isolationism "would lay down a general ban on moral reasoning" because if we cannot judge other cultures, then

A) We cannot really understand morality in general.
B) We cannot judge the morality of actions.
C) We cannot judge individual humans.
D) We cannot judge our own culture by comparison.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
If moral isolationism were true, how does Midgley think we would feel about moral questions about other cultures?

A) Concerned, because we wouldn't know the answers.
B) Apathetic, because we would have no ability to form opinions.
C) Confident, because we would answer based on our own culture.
D) Confused, because we would not even understand the questions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
According to Midgley, if an individual were to criticize the custom of another culture-for example, the Samurai "crossroads-cut"-a moral isolationist would likely respond by

A) Protesting that the individual has no right to criticize another culture.
B) Filling in the background to help the individual understand the custom.
C) Trying to change the individual's judgment of the custom.
D) All of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
According to Midgley, when we judge another culture, we use

A) The moral standards of that culture.
B) Universal, culturally neutral moral standards.
C) Moral standards of a third culture.
D) The moral standards of our own culture.
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Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Midgley talks about cultures such as Britain being formed from mixtures of different influences. What point is she making here?

A) We don't really understand each other's cultures; we just blindly adopt bits and pieces of cultural influence.
B) We are not cultural isolationists, so we probably are not moral isolationists either.
C) If we judged each other moralistically, instead of living harmoniously, cultural mixing couldn't have happened.
D) If we couldn't understand each other's cultures, cultural mixing couldn't have happened.
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k this deck
24
If moral isolationism were true, what would be most likely to happen when we encountered a new cultural influence?

A) It would have no impact because we would judge it as bad.
B) It would have no impact because we wouldn't understand it at all.
C) The unfamiliar culture would influence our own, even if we didn't understand it very well.
D) Our culture would influence the new one, but not vice versa.
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k this deck
25
Midgley mentions anthropologists studying small remote societies. What point does she make about these cases?

A) The anthropologists and tribesmen were able to make judgments about each other's cultures.
B) The anthropologists and tribesmen didn't make any moral judgments about each other.
C) Doing anthropology means you don't make any moral judgments about the people you are observing.
D) The tribesmen refused to make moral judgments about the anthropologists' culture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
What might anthropology be like if moral isolationism were true?

A) Anthropology would be just the same as it actually is.
B) Anthropologists could understand people in other cultures, but not judge them as good or bad people.
C) Anthropologists could describe the behavior of people in other cultures, but never really understand them.
D) There could be no anthropology of any kind if moral isolationism were true.
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27
Explain what Midgley means by "moral isolationism."
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28
Is praising another culture different from criticizing it? Is it okay to praise another culture but not to criticize it?
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29
Midgley asks, if we can't judge other cultures, can we really judge our own? How does she answer this question? Do you agree with her answer?
Kant's Ethics
Onora O'Neill
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30
Do you find the Formula of the End in Itself a plausible moral principle? Explain.
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31
What is a maxim, and how does it fit into Kant's moral theory?
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32
Why does Kant think that it is wrong to deceive others? Do you agree that this is the reason it is wrong? Explain.
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33
Kant claims that there is no one moral principle.
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34
According to Kant, it is always immoral to use someone as a means.
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35
Kant claims that we assess the moral status of an action on the basis of the maxim it expresses.
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36
In Kant's view, coercion is wrong because the person being coerced could not consent.
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37
Kant provides multiple formulations of the categorical imperative.
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38
According to O'Neil, Kant's moral theory has a reputation for being

A) Difficult to understand.
B) Demanding in its requirements.
C) Both a and b
D) Neither a nor b
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39
According to the Formula of the End in Itself, we must act in such a way that we always treat humanity

A) In a way that can be universalized.
B) Never simply as an end, but always at the same time as a means.
C) In a way that contributes to human happiness.
D) Never simply as a means, but always at the same time as an end.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Kant calls his supreme principle of morality

A) The Hypothetical Imperative.
B) The Categorical Imperative.
C) The Principle of Utility.
D) Both a and
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41
The maxim of an action is

A) The principle on which the agent sees him- or herself as acting.
B) A statement of preference.
C) The consequence of an action.
D) Both a and
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42
An action is wrong, according to Kant, if

A) It causes unhappiness.
B) It treats someone as a means.
C) Its maxim treats someone as a mere means.
D) It has an end.
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Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
According to Kant, we use a person as a mere means when

A) We manipulate the person.
B) We involve the person in an action to which he or she cannot in principle consent.
C) We deceive or coerce the person.
D) All of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
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44
According to Kant, it is not wrong to for one person to use another as a means when

A) Neither person consents to cooperation.
B) Each person consents to cooperation.
C) Maxims are not being followed.
D) None of the above.
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45
What is wrong, according to Kant, with coercing someone into doing something? Do you agree? Explain.
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46
Put the Formula of the End in Itself into your own words. Do you think that we can determine all right and wrong actions on the basis of this principle? Explain.
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47
Do you think there is a single moral principle? If so, what might it be? If not, why not?
Assessing Utilitarianism
Louis P. Pojman
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48
What do you think is the best objection to utilitarianism? Explain.
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49
Which is subject to more objections-act utilitarianism or rule utilitarianism? Or are they both subject to the same objections? Explain.
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50
Rule utilitarians claim that the right thing to do might not always, in that instance, produce the most good.
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51
The integrity objection to utilitarianism claims that one's deeply held projects and character traits are morally unimportant, given utilitarianism.
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52
The justice objection to utilitarianism claims that utilitarians worship justice as an absolute.
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53
Some think that utilitarianism is relativistic.
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54
Utilitarianism seems to counsel against resting.
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55
Pojman claims that utilitarianism, despite facing several problems, has two positive features: it is easy to apply and is not overly demanding.
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56
According to act utilitarianism, an act is right if and only if

A) It results in as much good as any available alternative.
B) It follows from a rule that is part of a system of rules that produces the most good.
C) It is universalizable.
D) The virtuous person would perform it.
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57
According to Pojman, the obvious criticism of act utilitarianism is that

A) We often lack the time to do calculations needed to determine which act is correct in each case.
B) It flies in the face of fundamental intuitions about minimally correct behavior.
C) Both a and b
D) Neither a nor b
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58
According to rule utilitarianism, an act is right if and only if

A) It results in as much good as any available alternative.
B) It follows from a rule that is part of a system of rules that produces the most good.
C) It is universalizable.
D) The virtuous person would perform it.
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59
The integrity objection to utilitarianism claims that

A) It is absurd.
B) It is relativistic.
C) It is too demanding.
D) All of the above.
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60
Utilitarianism claims that justice

A) Is morally important.
B) Is not absolute.
C) Is morally irrelevant.
D) Both a and b
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61
A utilitarian response to the Absurd-Implications Objection would be that

A) Justice is not an absolute.
B) We must be ready to change our cultural-induced biases.
C) Integrity is not an absolute.
D) Alienation helps devise strategies of action.
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62
Does utilitarianism entail that it is better to kill an innocent person to save the lives of twenty others? Explain.
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63
State an objection to utilitarianism that you think the rule utilitarian can answer but that the act utilitarian cannot. Explain why this is the case.
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64
Do you find utilitarianism attractive as a moral theory? Explain.
Virtue Ethics
Julia Driver
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65
What are three criticisms of virtue theory? How do you evaluate them?
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66
How does Aristotle's virtue ethics differ from Kant's duty ethics and Mill's utilitarianism? Explain.
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67
What is Aristotle's doctrine of the mean and how does it pertain to his virtue ethics?
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68
Current virtue ethicists take their inspiration mainly from the writings of Plato.
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69
Virtue ethics provides rules to guide human behavior.
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70
Aristotle believed that virtue is a mean state lying between two vices.
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71
According to Aristotle, a virtuous person experiences conflict between reason and passion.
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72
A major criticism of virtue ethics is that it does not provide a guide to action.
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73
Virtue ethics is based on

A) Universal maxims.
B) Rules that guide behavior.
C) The development of a person's character.
D) Abstract principles.
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74
For Aristotle, a good person is virtuous by

A) Following the rules of right action.
B) Embodying excellence in human character.
C) Maximizing the good for the greatest number of people.
D) Adhering to the Categorical Imperative.
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75
The doctrine of the mean states that

A) A virtue lies between two vices.
B) A virtue can be understood by itself.
C) There is no virtue in being mean.
D) One should always strive to be average.
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76
If "bravery" is the virtue, then

A) "Temperance" and "abstinence" are the vices.
B) "Excellence" and "failure" are the vices.
C) "Gluttony" and "abstinence are the vices.
D) "Cowardice" and "foolhardiness" are the vices.
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77
According to Aristotle, a "continent" person is someone who

A) Lives a harmonious life.
B) Suffers no inner turmoil.
C) Experiences conflict between actions and feelings.
D) Does not struggle between reason and passion.
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78
According to Aristotle, the person who acts rightly but feels badly about it is

A) Not virtuous.
B) Merely continent.
C) Both a and b
D) Neither a nor b
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79
Critics of virtue ethics claim that

A) It does not provide a guide for right action.
B) It fails to conform to what we know of human behavior.
C) It cannot tell us what to do in conflict situations.
D) All of the above.
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80
Virtue ethicists respond to the criticism that virtue ethics has trouble telling us the right thing to do in conflict situations by pointing out that

A) Morality is messy.
B) There may be more than one right answer to moral questions.
C) Ethical rules establish right action for every situation.
D) Both a and b
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