Exam 3: Evaluating Moral Arguments
Exam 1: Ethics and the Examined Life25 Questions
Exam 2: Subjectivism, Relativism, and Emotivism25 Questions
Exam 3: Evaluating Moral Arguments26 Questions
Exam 4: The Power of Moral Theories25 Questions
Exam 5: Consequentialist Theories: Maximize the Good25 Questions
Exam 6: Nonconsequentialist Theories: Do Your Duty25 Questions
Exam 7: Virtue Ethics: Be A Good Person25 Questions
Exam 8: Abortion25 Questions
Exam 9: Altering Genes and Cloning Humans25 Questions
Exam 10: Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Suicide24 Questions
Exam 11: Capital Punishment25 Questions
Exam 12: Drug Use, Harm, and Personal Liberty25 Questions
Exam 13: Sexual Morality25 Questions
Exam 14: Same-Sex Marriage21 Questions
Exam 15: Environmental Ethics25 Questions
Exam 16: Animal Rights25 Questions
Exam 17: Political Violence: War, Terrorism, and Torture24 Questions
Exam 18: Equality and Affirmative Action25 Questions
Exam 19: Global Economic Justice25 Questions
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The fallacy of drawing a conclusion about an entire group of people or things based on an undersized sample of the group is known as:
(Multiple Choice)
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The essential elements that one should strive for in any moral essay or conversation include:
(Multiple Choice)
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What is the fallacy used in the following passage known as?
Passage: No one can prove that a fetus is not a person from the moment of conception.So a fetus must be accorded full moral rights as soon as it is conceived.
(Multiple Choice)
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What is the implied premise in the following moral argument?
Argument: The war did not increase the amount of happiness in the world.So the war was morally wrong.
(Multiple Choice)
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