Exam 34: Divestment Is a Shared Responsibility
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Exam 2: The Ethics of Ghosting13 Questions
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Exam 4: Sexual Privacy13 Questions
Exam 5: Sexism in Practice: Feminist Ethics Evaluating the Hookup Culture13 Questions
Exam 6: Date Rapes Other Victim13 Questions
Exam 7: Alcohol and Rape13 Questions
Exam 8: Consent Is Not Enough13 Questions
Exam 9: Defining Abortion and Critiquing Common Arguments About Abortion13 Questions
Exam 10: A Defense of Abortion13 Questions
Exam 11: Why Abortion Is Immoral13 Questions
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Exam 14: A Sensible Antiporn Feminism13 Questions
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Exam 16: Trans Persons, Cisgender Persons, and Gender Identities12 Questions
Exam 17: The Structure of Racism in Color-Blind, Post-Racial America13 Questions
Exam 18: Racism: What It Is and What It Isnt13 Questions
Exam 19: Self-Respect and Protest13 Questions
Exam 20: Symbolic Protest and Calculated Silence13 Questions
Exam 21: Be the Change: Student Activism13 Questions
Exam 22: Complacency on Campus: How Allies Can Do Better13 Questions
Exam 23: New Social Media and the Technomoral Virtues13 Questions
Exam 24: The More We Get Together on Social Media the Worse Off Well Be and the Worse Off Well Make Our Friends13 Questions
Exam 25: A Defense of Stealing E-Books13 Questions
Exam 26: The Gamers Dilemma: An Analysis of the Arguments for the Moral Distinction Between Virtual Murder and Virtual Pedophilia26 Questions
Exam 27: Against Womens Sports13 Questions
Exam 28: Just Say No for Now: The Ethics of Illegal Drug Use13 Questions
Exam 29: The Singer Solution to World Poverty13 Questions
Exam 30: Puppies, Pigs, and People: Eating Meat and Marginal Cases13 Questions
Exam 31: Consumer Ethics, Food Ethics, and Beyond13 Questions
Exam 32: Its Not My Fault: Global Warming and Individual Moral Obligations13 Questions
Exam 33: Climate, Collective Action, and Individual Ethical Obligations13 Questions
Exam 35: Affording Disaster: Concealed Carry on Campus13 Questions
Exam 36: Guns on Campus: a Defense13 Questions
Exam 37: Social Membership and the Right to College13 Questions
Exam 38: GEN EDS: Sucker U13 Questions
Exam 39: Education for Citizenship in an ERA of Global Connection13 Questions
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Exam 44: Recognizing the Ethical Costs of Upward Mobility13 Questions
Exam 45: Are You Morally Responsible for Your Student Loans13 Questions
Exam 46: You Are Spider-Man13 Questions
Exam 48: Claiming an Education13 Questions
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What does Godoy say the about power to affect the climate?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
D
What is one way that interest affects responsibility?
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C
In his essay, Eric S. Godoy only considers one objection to his position. In your essay, develop another objection to his view (you might think that universities have good reasons to invest in fossil fuel companies, or that responsibility does not demand that IHEs divest, etc.). Then, consider how Godoy might respond to your objection.
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(Essay)
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Correct Answer:
Offer an objection to Godoy's position on fossil fuel divestment that makes a serious attempt to respond to Godoy's concerns about it.
Accurately summarize, and then apply, Godoy's ideas to the objection just offered.
Students forming organizations that liaise with other groups within the larger community is an example of what?
(Multiple Choice)
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What does Godoy have to say about actions like flying less, eating less meat, and adjusting your thermostat?
(Multiple Choice)
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What's another issue where it would be helpful to engage in the act of taking collective responsibility? Apply Iris Young's four parameters, which act as guidelines when thinking through possible ways to meet social connection responsibility, to the issue that you have chosen. What would it look like if we thought about social responsibility when it comes to the problem that you're discussing?
(Essay)
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What does Godoy say about the act of thinking about responsibility in individualist terms?
(Multiple Choice)
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While traditional notions of responsibility ________ that cause harm, Young suggests that ________ have the responsibility to improve background conditions and the structures that influence individual action.
(Multiple Choice)
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Do some research into the mission statement of your college. Is there anything in it that would speak in favor of divesting from fossil fuels? Has your college already divested? If not, write a letter to your school, incorporating at least some of the points that Eric S. Godoy makes in his essay, encouraging it to divest. If your school has divested, walk through the steps involved in that process, highlighting any actions that Young's picture of responsibility would have supported or encouraged.
(Essay)
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Why is Godoy interested in the fossil fuel divestment movement?
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