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Ethics FINAL EXAM Questions and Answers 100% Solved

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Ethics FINAL EXAM Questions and Answers 100% Solved Not thinking too deeply or too systematically about ethical concerns - undermines your personal freedom. What is a major difference between descriptive ethics and normative ethics - Normative ethics implies that some people's moral beliefs ar...

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  • October 22, 2024
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  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • Ethics
  • Ethics
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Ethics FINAL EXAM Questions and

Answers 100% Solved


Not thinking too deeply or too systematically about ethical concerns -

✔✔undermines your personal freedom.

What is a major difference between descriptive ethics and normative ethics

- ✔✔Normative ethics implies that some people's moral beliefs are

incorrect, whereas descriptive ethics does not.

What does normative ethics study - ✔✔principles, rules, or theories that

guide our actions and judgments

Applied ethics is the - ✔✔application of moral norms to specific moral

issues or cases

TRUE OR FALSE: An example of moral reasoning is avoiding actions

whenever you feel disgusted by them. - ✔✔FALSE

Subjective relativism is the doctrine that - ✔✔an action is morally right if

one approves of it.

, ©JOSHCLAY 2024/2025. YEAR PUBLISHED 2024.

Objectivism is the view that - ✔✔some moral principles are valid for

everyone

Subjective relativism implies that when a person states their moral beliefs,

that person is - ✔✔incapable of being in error

Cultural relativists may believe their theory promotes tolerance of other

cultures. However, the author argues against this. Which statement best

summarizes his argument? - ✔✔Cultural relativists cannot consistently say

that tolerance is objectively good.

Cultural relativism implies that the abolition of slavery in the United States -

✔✔cannot be regarded as moral progress.

Name the form of the following argument: If the dog barks, something must

be wrong. Something must be wrong. Therefore, the dog will bark. -

✔✔affirming the consequent

A moral statement is a - ✔✔A statement affirming that an action is right or

wrong or that a person (or one's motive or character) is good or bad

A moral theory is - ✔✔more useful than a moral code

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