Deck 9: Communication Ethics and Community

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Question
The nature of communities raises ethical issues of justice.
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Question
Ethical issues of justice are rare in communities.
Question
The dialectical tension of similarity and differences is a fundamental contradiction in all communities.
Question
The desire to be accepted by others is a primary motivation for community.
Question
Community identity has little to do with how a community manages the dialectical tension of similarity and different.
Question
How a community defines its identity creates guidelines for how the community treats its members who are different.
Question
A distinctive community identity helps community members identify who is a legitimate member of their community and who is not.
Question
Distinctive communication practices help distinguish community members from outsiders.
Question
You can signal your community identity by wearing distinctive clothing, distinctive nonverbal cues, or and distinctive language that are markers of a specific community identity.
Question
Variations in clothing within a community sometimes signals the existence of sub-communities within a larger community.
Question
Different types of veils worn by Muslim women indicates all these women are members of the same Muslim community.
Question
Wearing specific colors or using specific nonverbal cues are signs of community identity.
Question
Excluding outsiders who are different in some way is always unethical and ineffective in maintaining either community identity and the broader community.
Question
Physical separation of communities, such as the separation of Irish Catholic from English Protestants in Ireland during the 17th century, is an example of maintaining community identity and the broader community through exclusion.
Question
Disagreements about Muslim wearing a veil or dressing modestly are part of conflicts about community identity and who is a legitimate member of a community.
Question
It is rare and unusual for communities to use violence to exclude persons labeled outsiders from a community.
Question
Communities intolerant of difference from their idealized community identity, label community members who differ from the ideal "outsiders," and often exclude them.
Question
A community's identity has little impact on a how it practices justice.
Question
The most fundamental question of justice is a community is "who has a legitimate interest?"
Question
The question "what is a legitimate interest?" asks what is needed for members of a community to survive and thrive.
Question
In a workplace community, the stakeholders in deciding work schedules are employees, the company, and shareholders.
Question
The legitimate interests of community members who differ from the idealized community identity are never as important as community members similar to the idealized community identity.
Question
The paradox of community life is that all community members are treated fairly.
Question
How communities treat nonconforming community members raises questions of justice.
Question
How communities treat outsiders can raise questions of justice.
Question
When some people are accepted into a community, others are simultaneously excluded, creates the paradox of community life.
Question
The Golden Rules encourages us to consider how community members who are different from us are simultaneously similar to us in important ways.
Question
The political toleration of difference is a political practice for managing the dialectical tension of similarity and different in communities.
Question
The practice of political toleration of difference recognizes that nonconforming minorities in the community have little chance of becoming the majority in the future.
Question
Philosophical theories of ethics offer little help in addressing issues of justice in the treatment of nonconforming community members.
Question
Tension between individuals and their community has little influence on questions of justice within communities
Question
The dialectical tension between individuals and community develop from the relational connections between community members.
Question
Interdependent relational connections focus on how community members can be creative and innovate.
Question
Understanding community relationships as interdependent encourages community members to recognize relational responsibilities that support their common community life.
Question
Relational responsibilities of community are best expressed in laws and formal rules that can be easily enforced.
Question
Volunteering at a homeless shelter or helping elderly neighbors care for their home are examples of informal relational responsibilities and duties of community life.
Question
Being independent and personal integrity is valued in loose relational connections of community.
Question
Freedom of thought and action is valued in interdependent relational connections of community.
Question
Recognizing that without individuals there would be no community is an important contribution of understanding community relationships as loose connections.
Question
It is possible to minimize dialectical tensions of community life, so issues of justice are communities will begin to disappear.
Question
Dialectical tensions of community never go away, so issues of justice in a community occur again and again.
Question
Communication practices and social relationships that create the strength and vitality of a community create a community's social capital.
Question
Social capital researchers describe the relational connections of social relationships as relational bridges and bonds.
Question
Honesty and cooperativeness of community members creates social trust.
Question
Social trust is based upon reliable expectations about how community members will act.
Question
Mutual social relationships among community members are important social capital for a community.
Question
Sociologists, including Robert Putnam, have researched how social capital is weakening in North American and European societies.
Question
Political parties and large institutions, like governments, schools, and high education are essential social capital.
Question
Increased digital communication is the primary reason social capital is weakening.
Question
Expressions of feeling isolated and being disconnected from others are examples of weakened social capital found by researchers.
Question
Research shows that there is no relationship between income inequality and social capital.
Question
One sign of strong social capital in communities is social mobility.
Question
Because social capital requires stable relationships in local communities, one way to strengthen social capital is to strengthen relationships between community members
Question
Communication strategies for managing dialectical tensions of community may also strengthen relationships among community members, rebuilding social capital.
Question
Metaphors of community offer frameworks for thinking about fairness in a community and for developing strategies to strengthen social capital.
Question
Two metaphors for thinking about relationships in communities are "friendship" and "citizenship."
Question
"Friendship" is an effective metaphor to develop a strategy for strengthening social capital, because there is strong agreement about what a good friend is.
Question
Two models of friendship that offer frameworks for thinking about justice and social capital, are Aristotle's striving for the happiness of a friend and a relationship of self-revelation.
Question
In Aristotle's model of friendship considers your happiness as important as the happiness of your friend. True
Question
Sacrifice of personal self-interest for a friend's happiness plays a key role in Aristotle's understanding of friendship
Question
Interpersonal trust in Aristotle's model of friendship develops because friends sacrifice their personal self-interest for each other.
Question
To practice Aristotle's model of friendship, friends must have a common understanding of "the good" of friendship that creates happiness.
Question
Questions of fairness develop between friends, when they have disagreements about "the good" of friendship.
Question
Because there is agreement about "the good" of friendships, Aristotle's model of friendship is an effective framework for strengthening social capital.
Question
Relationships based on self-actualization offer support for achieving personal goals.
Question
Authentic and empathic communication are important for effective self-actualizing relationships.
Question
Self-actualizing relationships require that friends have consensus about how they will help each other meet their individual personal goals.
Question
Interpersonal trust in self-actualizing relationships is based upon authentic communication.
Question
Changing feelings, needs, or goals are all reasons that a self-actualizing friendship may end.
Question
Self-actualizing friendship strengthen communication relationships and social capital with a stable interpersonal consensus based upon authentic communication and empathy.
Question
Without personal freedom, self-actualizing relationships would not exist.
Question
Persons who are not part of the interpersonal consensus of self-actualizing relationships are excluded.
Question
The combination of self-actualization, authentic communication, and empathy encourages a style of thinking called emotivism.
Question
Emotivism discourages communicators to think about their personal feelings and preferences and encourages consideration of others in broad issues of justice within a community.
Question
Emotivist thinking encourages a personal view of justice-"Is it fair for you or me?"
Question
The self-actualizing model of friendship encourages consideration of others outside of the friendship in the broader community
Question
The stability and personal freedom of self-actualizing friendship make this an effective framework for strengthening social capital in communities.
Question
The citizenship metaphor for communities is about involvement in political parties.
Question
The metaphor of citizenship encourages thinking about benefits of community membership and responsibilities for maintaining the community.
Question
In the citizenship metaphor, political and legal rights of citizenship are highlighted as a benefit of community membership.
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Deck 9: Communication Ethics and Community
1
The nature of communities raises ethical issues of justice.
True
2
Ethical issues of justice are rare in communities.
False
3
The dialectical tension of similarity and differences is a fundamental contradiction in all communities.
True
4
The desire to be accepted by others is a primary motivation for community.
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k this deck
5
Community identity has little to do with how a community manages the dialectical tension of similarity and different.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 165 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
6
How a community defines its identity creates guidelines for how the community treats its members who are different.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 165 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
7
A distinctive community identity helps community members identify who is a legitimate member of their community and who is not.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 165 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
8
Distinctive communication practices help distinguish community members from outsiders.
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Unlock for access to all 165 flashcards in this deck.
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9
You can signal your community identity by wearing distinctive clothing, distinctive nonverbal cues, or and distinctive language that are markers of a specific community identity.
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10
Variations in clothing within a community sometimes signals the existence of sub-communities within a larger community.
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11
Different types of veils worn by Muslim women indicates all these women are members of the same Muslim community.
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12
Wearing specific colors or using specific nonverbal cues are signs of community identity.
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13
Excluding outsiders who are different in some way is always unethical and ineffective in maintaining either community identity and the broader community.
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14
Physical separation of communities, such as the separation of Irish Catholic from English Protestants in Ireland during the 17th century, is an example of maintaining community identity and the broader community through exclusion.
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15
Disagreements about Muslim wearing a veil or dressing modestly are part of conflicts about community identity and who is a legitimate member of a community.
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16
It is rare and unusual for communities to use violence to exclude persons labeled outsiders from a community.
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17
Communities intolerant of difference from their idealized community identity, label community members who differ from the ideal "outsiders," and often exclude them.
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18
A community's identity has little impact on a how it practices justice.
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19
The most fundamental question of justice is a community is "who has a legitimate interest?"
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20
The question "what is a legitimate interest?" asks what is needed for members of a community to survive and thrive.
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21
In a workplace community, the stakeholders in deciding work schedules are employees, the company, and shareholders.
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22
The legitimate interests of community members who differ from the idealized community identity are never as important as community members similar to the idealized community identity.
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23
The paradox of community life is that all community members are treated fairly.
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24
How communities treat nonconforming community members raises questions of justice.
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25
How communities treat outsiders can raise questions of justice.
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26
When some people are accepted into a community, others are simultaneously excluded, creates the paradox of community life.
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27
The Golden Rules encourages us to consider how community members who are different from us are simultaneously similar to us in important ways.
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k this deck
28
The political toleration of difference is a political practice for managing the dialectical tension of similarity and different in communities.
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k this deck
29
The practice of political toleration of difference recognizes that nonconforming minorities in the community have little chance of becoming the majority in the future.
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30
Philosophical theories of ethics offer little help in addressing issues of justice in the treatment of nonconforming community members.
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31
Tension between individuals and their community has little influence on questions of justice within communities
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32
The dialectical tension between individuals and community develop from the relational connections between community members.
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k this deck
33
Interdependent relational connections focus on how community members can be creative and innovate.
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k this deck
34
Understanding community relationships as interdependent encourages community members to recognize relational responsibilities that support their common community life.
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k this deck
35
Relational responsibilities of community are best expressed in laws and formal rules that can be easily enforced.
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k this deck
36
Volunteering at a homeless shelter or helping elderly neighbors care for their home are examples of informal relational responsibilities and duties of community life.
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k this deck
37
Being independent and personal integrity is valued in loose relational connections of community.
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k this deck
38
Freedom of thought and action is valued in interdependent relational connections of community.
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k this deck
39
Recognizing that without individuals there would be no community is an important contribution of understanding community relationships as loose connections.
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40
It is possible to minimize dialectical tensions of community life, so issues of justice are communities will begin to disappear.
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41
Dialectical tensions of community never go away, so issues of justice in a community occur again and again.
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k this deck
42
Communication practices and social relationships that create the strength and vitality of a community create a community's social capital.
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k this deck
43
Social capital researchers describe the relational connections of social relationships as relational bridges and bonds.
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k this deck
44
Honesty and cooperativeness of community members creates social trust.
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k this deck
45
Social trust is based upon reliable expectations about how community members will act.
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k this deck
46
Mutual social relationships among community members are important social capital for a community.
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k this deck
47
Sociologists, including Robert Putnam, have researched how social capital is weakening in North American and European societies.
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k this deck
48
Political parties and large institutions, like governments, schools, and high education are essential social capital.
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k this deck
49
Increased digital communication is the primary reason social capital is weakening.
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k this deck
50
Expressions of feeling isolated and being disconnected from others are examples of weakened social capital found by researchers.
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k this deck
51
Research shows that there is no relationship between income inequality and social capital.
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k this deck
52
One sign of strong social capital in communities is social mobility.
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53
Because social capital requires stable relationships in local communities, one way to strengthen social capital is to strengthen relationships between community members
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Unlock for access to all 165 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
Communication strategies for managing dialectical tensions of community may also strengthen relationships among community members, rebuilding social capital.
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k this deck
55
Metaphors of community offer frameworks for thinking about fairness in a community and for developing strategies to strengthen social capital.
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k this deck
56
Two metaphors for thinking about relationships in communities are "friendship" and "citizenship."
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
"Friendship" is an effective metaphor to develop a strategy for strengthening social capital, because there is strong agreement about what a good friend is.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
Two models of friendship that offer frameworks for thinking about justice and social capital, are Aristotle's striving for the happiness of a friend and a relationship of self-revelation.
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Unlock for access to all 165 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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59
In Aristotle's model of friendship considers your happiness as important as the happiness of your friend. True
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60
Sacrifice of personal self-interest for a friend's happiness plays a key role in Aristotle's understanding of friendship
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Unlock for access to all 165 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
61
Interpersonal trust in Aristotle's model of friendship develops because friends sacrifice their personal self-interest for each other.
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Unlock for access to all 165 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
To practice Aristotle's model of friendship, friends must have a common understanding of "the good" of friendship that creates happiness.
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Unlock for access to all 165 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
Questions of fairness develop between friends, when they have disagreements about "the good" of friendship.
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k this deck
64
Because there is agreement about "the good" of friendships, Aristotle's model of friendship is an effective framework for strengthening social capital.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 165 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
Relationships based on self-actualization offer support for achieving personal goals.
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k this deck
66
Authentic and empathic communication are important for effective self-actualizing relationships.
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67
Self-actualizing relationships require that friends have consensus about how they will help each other meet their individual personal goals.
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68
Interpersonal trust in self-actualizing relationships is based upon authentic communication.
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69
Changing feelings, needs, or goals are all reasons that a self-actualizing friendship may end.
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70
Self-actualizing friendship strengthen communication relationships and social capital with a stable interpersonal consensus based upon authentic communication and empathy.
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71
Without personal freedom, self-actualizing relationships would not exist.
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72
Persons who are not part of the interpersonal consensus of self-actualizing relationships are excluded.
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73
The combination of self-actualization, authentic communication, and empathy encourages a style of thinking called emotivism.
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74
Emotivism discourages communicators to think about their personal feelings and preferences and encourages consideration of others in broad issues of justice within a community.
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75
Emotivist thinking encourages a personal view of justice-"Is it fair for you or me?"
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76
The self-actualizing model of friendship encourages consideration of others outside of the friendship in the broader community
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77
The stability and personal freedom of self-actualizing friendship make this an effective framework for strengthening social capital in communities.
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k this deck
78
The citizenship metaphor for communities is about involvement in political parties.
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79
The metaphor of citizenship encourages thinking about benefits of community membership and responsibilities for maintaining the community.
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80
In the citizenship metaphor, political and legal rights of citizenship are highlighted as a benefit of community membership.
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