Exam 10: Method and Moral Justification
Exam 1: Moral Norms48 Questions
Exam 2: Moral Character48 Questions
Exam 3: Moral Status48 Questions
Exam 4: Respect for Autonomy48 Questions
Exam 5: Nonmaleficence48 Questions
Exam 6: Beneficence48 Questions
Exam 7: Justice34 Questions
Exam 8: Professional-Patient Relationships48 Questions
Exam 9: Moral Theories48 Questions
Exam 10: Method and Moral Justification48 Questions
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Three models of ethical theory include top-down reasoning, bottom-up reasoning, and reasoning based on coherence and considered judgments.
(True/False)
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Beauchamp and Childress reject the use of the casuistical method and of analogy in moral reasoning.
(True/False)
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According to John Rawls, as quoted by Beauchamp and Childress, the moral convictions in which we have the highest confidence and believe to have the least bias are _________ _________.
(Short Answer)
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What is a feature of all common-morality theories, according to Beauchamp and Childress?
(Multiple Choice)
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At what point can a moral judge claim to have reached a considered judgment, according to Beauchamp and Childress?
(Multiple Choice)
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_________ ________, as a form of ethical reasoning, is a way of bringing principles, judgments, and background theories into a state of equilibrium or harmony.
(Short Answer)
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Beauchamp and Childress call their own model of ethical reasoning a form of:
(Multiple Choice)
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What is one way Beauchamp and Childress describe the method of casuistry in ethical reasoning?
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following do Beauchamp and Childress say about justification in ethical reasoning?
(Multiple Choice)
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Proponents of reflective equilibrium in ethical thinking argue that a theory or set of moral beliefs is justified if it maximizes the coherence of the overall set of beliefs that are accepted upon reflective examination.
(True/False)
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Beauchamp and Childress argue that a theory of the common morality should remain open to the possibility that the common morality may incorporate more substantially a rule of nondiscrimination by including rules of _______ moral consideration for groups such as women, people of every ethnicity, the great apes, and other parties currently excluded from some kinds of moral considerations.
(Short Answer)
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Why is the common morality better suited to play a vital role in biomedical ethics than other theories discussed by Beauchamp and Childress?
(Multiple Choice)
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What is the main thesis of thinkers who embrace reflective equilibrium as their method for moral thinking?
(Multiple Choice)
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According to Beauchamp and Childress, what is the usual process by which societal moral norms undergo change?
(Multiple Choice)
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How do Beauchamp and Childress's four principles of biomedical ethics relate to what they describe as the common morality?
(Multiple Choice)
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As discussed by Beauchamp and Childress, when some feature in a person's or group's prevailing structure of moral views conflicts with one or more of their considered judgments, they must modify something in their viewpoint in order to achieve equilibrium.
(True/False)
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Even when abstract moral norms do not change, often the ________ of their application can change, meaning that moral principles are deemed to apply to more or different groups than previously.
(Short Answer)
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Beauchamp and Childress claim that the four basic principles they describe in their book are an expression of the full moral content of the common morality.
(True/False)
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The common morality anchors moral theory by capturing the _________ moral point of view, or the judgments and norms that make up moral thinking prior to systematization in a general ethical theory.
(Short Answer)
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