Exam 3: Evaluating Moral Arguments
Exam 1: Ethics and the Examined Life 25 Questions
Exam 2: Subjectivism, Relativism, and Emotivism25 Questions
Exam 3: Evaluating Moral Arguments25 Questions
Exam 4: The Power of Moral Theories25 Questions
Exam 5: Consequentialist Theories: Maximize the Good33 Questions
Exam 6: Nonconsequentialist Theories: Do Your Duty25 Questions
Exam 7: Virtue Ethics: Be a Good Person26 Questions
Exam 8: Feminist Ethics and the Ethics of Care25 Questions
Exam 9: Abortion25 Questions
Exam 10: Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Suicide26 Questions
Exam 11: Delivering Health Care25 Questions
Exam 12: Animal Welfare25 Questions
Exam 13: Environmental Ethics25 Questions
Exam 14: Racism, Equality, and Discrimination34 Questions
Exam 15: Sexual Morality26 Questions
Exam 16: Free Speech on Campus25 Questions
Exam 17: Drugs, Guns, and Personal Liberty35 Questions
Exam 18: Capital Punishment26 Questions
Exam 19: Political Violence: War, Terrorism, and Torture25 Questions
Exam 20: The Ethics of Immigration25 Questions
Exam 21: Global Economic Justice25 Questions
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Name the form of the following argument: If the dog barks, something must be wrong. Something must be wrong. Therefore, the dog will bark.
(Multiple Choice)
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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."
(Multiple Choice)
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The phrases "because," "given that," "due to the fact that," and "for the reason that" are
(Multiple Choice)
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