Deck 4: Six Ethical Values of Communication

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Question
Values contribute little to our understanding of what is good or bad, right or wrong.
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Question
Each ethical value of communication concerns either or both the content and relational dimensions of the communication process.
Question
Truthfulness may be a universal ethical value.
Question
Truth concerns whether the content of communication messages is as accurate as possible and reliable.
Question
When making decisions, at some points we must trust the accuracy and reliability of information and ideas presented by others.
Question
For Plato, truth is universal, enduring, and difficult to recognize or discover.
Question
Searching for the truth through reasoning or other mental processes is one approach to understanding the truth.
Question
Plato believed that because people have different experiences, there are many different truths.
Question
Personal experience and observation is a second approach for understanding truth.
Question
If a person can never be certain she knows the complete truth, she must be open to listening to and examining other points of view.
Question
Both certainty and curiosity promote the search for truth.
Question
Telling the truth is a universal law or duty that respects human dignity, according to philosopher Immanuel Kant.
Question
The second expression of the categorical imperative tells us that lying is unethical because lies use others as a means to achieve the liar's goal.
Question
Philosopher Sissela Bok argues that since it is not possible to know the whole truth, the real ethical issue is whether a communicator intends to tell the truth as she understands it.
Question
The principle of veracity is the presumption that communicators are honest.
Question
The principle of veracity has no importance for competent communication.
Question
According to Bok, a lie is any intentionally deceptive message that is stated.
Question
Using Bok's definition of a lie it is impossible to be honest while lying.
Question
Bok argues that lies are a form of violence, a communicative assault on another person.
Question
From the perspective of the deceived, there is no such thing as a trivial lie.
Question
There are few or no harms to a liar, when she tells lies.
Question
A harm of lying is that communicators lose trust in what others say.
Question
Not being able to recognize when others are being truth is a danger of cynicism.
Question
According to Kant, telling a white or altruistic lie is ethically acceptable.
Question
Kant's first expression of the categorical imperative, to practice only those ethical principles that you will to be a universal law, allows for no exceptions.
Question
According to Kant, telling the truth is greater than any other responsibility, so you should never lie.
Question
The ethical value of justice develops from the moral emotion of the equality bias, where you compare what you receive or experience to what others receive or experience.
Question
There is only one type of justice, fairness
Question
Corrective justice rights a wrong by punishing a wrongdoer.
Question
What is most important is corrective justice is making sure the wrongdoer is punished.
Question
The ethical challenge of practicing corrective justice is weighing the severity of a punishment against the wrongness of an act, so a punishment is not too severe or too lenient.
Question
In retributive justice a victim and her family or friends are involved in deciding what is a deserving punishment for a wrongdoer.
Question
Conflict spirals can be an unintended consequence of practicing retributive justice.
Question
Research shows that victims can accurately perceive that their responses or punishments of the wrongdoer are equal in severity to the wrongs they experienced.
Question
Procedural justice focuses on the processes for deciding what is fair, not the actual decision itself.
Question
Procedural justice is a highly personalized practice of justice.
Question
To be fair, processes of procedural justice must be impartial.
Question
Drawing a name out of a hat or a jury trial are examples of procedural justice.
Question
Distributive justice concerns the fairness of how benefits or harms are distributed among people.
Question
Distributive justice uses criteria, such as equality, merit, or special needs and abilities, to
distribute goods or harms among people.
Question
Distributive and procedural justice are never practiced together.
Question
Involvement of special interests raise questions of fairness in procedural or distributive justice.
Question
One of the aims of restorative justice is to reconcile broken relationships and rebuild communities.
Question
Holding wrongdoers accountable has no role in practicing restorative justice.
Question
Apology and forgiveness are two practices of corrective justice.
Question
Harmonic justice is different from other forms of justice in that it does not involve social comparison.
Question
Harmonic justice is an interpersonal practice of fairness that focuses a communicator's attention on her communication partner's legitimate interests to survive and thrive.
Question
The communication act of acknowledgment is a practice of harmonic justice.
Question
The ethical value of freedom concerns the absence of coercion and constraint.
Question
Orlando Patterson suggests we think of freedom as a musical chord of three notes-personal freedom, sovereignal freedom, and civility.
Question
Personal freedom is the freedom to do what you wish, if you do not harm others.
Question
Examples of Isaiah Belin's concept of negative freedom are found in the Bill of Rights of the US Constitution.
Question
Negative freedom protects people by establishing limits on the actions of others.
Question
Sovereignal freedom is the power to do what you want to do as far as you possibly can.
Question
Accountability for one's actions is important in both personal and sovereignal freedom.
Question
The experience of slavery, of both the master and the slave, is important in understanding the nature of all forms of freedom.
Question
The practice of freedom by individuals depends on their relationships to others who resources that maintain freedom.
Question
Civic freedom involves both rights and responsibility for participating in the life and governance of the community.
Question
Fulfilling civic responsibilities such as volunteering or voting, create resources that maintain the community, making rights such as freedom of speech possible.
Question
Understanding and meeting the needs of persons in our interpersonal relationships involves the value of care.
Question
The ethical value of care prioritizes the needs of others.
Question
All practices of care are ethical.
Question
Care acknowledges and incorporates emotions of the care-giver and cared-for.
Question
Listening is not a critical communication skill for practicing care.
Question
Julia Wood describes caring as a practice of selflessness typically limited to women.
Question
To be ethical, the practice of care must address only the needs of the cared-for.
Question
Addressing the needs of both the care-giver and care-for is necessary for the ethical practice of care.
Question
Integrity focuses on the private practice of an ethical value.
Question
Integrity focuses on consistent and public practice of an ethical value or principle.
Question
Stephen Carter's definition of integrity does not require that the practice of integrity always be consistent.
Question
Discerning what is right is the first step of Stephen Carter's definition of integrity.
Question
Publicly stating or explaining why you acted as you did is not important for integrity.
Question
Encouraging public discussion and debate about what is ethical is one reason why it is important for integrity to be public.
Question
Publicly explaining why we did what we did allows others to challenge and test our reasoning for rationalizations or other errors.
Question
According to Stephen Carter, consistency alone lacks integrity.
Question
It is possible to act with consistency and still lack integrity.
Question
Compromise always lacks integrity.
Question
Answering the question "Will this compromise help me move toward my goal of practicing this ethical value or principle?" helps identify integrity-preserving compromise.
Question
Acts of respect communicate honor.
Question
All honor is ethical.
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Deck 4: Six Ethical Values of Communication
1
Values contribute little to our understanding of what is good or bad, right or wrong.
False
2
Each ethical value of communication concerns either or both the content and relational dimensions of the communication process.
True
3
Truthfulness may be a universal ethical value.
True
4
Truth concerns whether the content of communication messages is as accurate as possible and reliable.
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5
When making decisions, at some points we must trust the accuracy and reliability of information and ideas presented by others.
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6
For Plato, truth is universal, enduring, and difficult to recognize or discover.
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7
Searching for the truth through reasoning or other mental processes is one approach to understanding the truth.
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8
Plato believed that because people have different experiences, there are many different truths.
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9
Personal experience and observation is a second approach for understanding truth.
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10
If a person can never be certain she knows the complete truth, she must be open to listening to and examining other points of view.
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11
Both certainty and curiosity promote the search for truth.
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12
Telling the truth is a universal law or duty that respects human dignity, according to philosopher Immanuel Kant.
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13
The second expression of the categorical imperative tells us that lying is unethical because lies use others as a means to achieve the liar's goal.
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14
Philosopher Sissela Bok argues that since it is not possible to know the whole truth, the real ethical issue is whether a communicator intends to tell the truth as she understands it.
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15
The principle of veracity is the presumption that communicators are honest.
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16
The principle of veracity has no importance for competent communication.
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17
According to Bok, a lie is any intentionally deceptive message that is stated.
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18
Using Bok's definition of a lie it is impossible to be honest while lying.
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19
Bok argues that lies are a form of violence, a communicative assault on another person.
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20
From the perspective of the deceived, there is no such thing as a trivial lie.
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21
There are few or no harms to a liar, when she tells lies.
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22
A harm of lying is that communicators lose trust in what others say.
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23
Not being able to recognize when others are being truth is a danger of cynicism.
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24
According to Kant, telling a white or altruistic lie is ethically acceptable.
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25
Kant's first expression of the categorical imperative, to practice only those ethical principles that you will to be a universal law, allows for no exceptions.
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26
According to Kant, telling the truth is greater than any other responsibility, so you should never lie.
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k this deck
27
The ethical value of justice develops from the moral emotion of the equality bias, where you compare what you receive or experience to what others receive or experience.
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28
There is only one type of justice, fairness
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29
Corrective justice rights a wrong by punishing a wrongdoer.
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30
What is most important is corrective justice is making sure the wrongdoer is punished.
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31
The ethical challenge of practicing corrective justice is weighing the severity of a punishment against the wrongness of an act, so a punishment is not too severe or too lenient.
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32
In retributive justice a victim and her family or friends are involved in deciding what is a deserving punishment for a wrongdoer.
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33
Conflict spirals can be an unintended consequence of practicing retributive justice.
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34
Research shows that victims can accurately perceive that their responses or punishments of the wrongdoer are equal in severity to the wrongs they experienced.
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35
Procedural justice focuses on the processes for deciding what is fair, not the actual decision itself.
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36
Procedural justice is a highly personalized practice of justice.
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37
To be fair, processes of procedural justice must be impartial.
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38
Drawing a name out of a hat or a jury trial are examples of procedural justice.
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39
Distributive justice concerns the fairness of how benefits or harms are distributed among people.
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40
Distributive justice uses criteria, such as equality, merit, or special needs and abilities, to
distribute goods or harms among people.
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41
Distributive and procedural justice are never practiced together.
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42
Involvement of special interests raise questions of fairness in procedural or distributive justice.
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43
One of the aims of restorative justice is to reconcile broken relationships and rebuild communities.
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44
Holding wrongdoers accountable has no role in practicing restorative justice.
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45
Apology and forgiveness are two practices of corrective justice.
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46
Harmonic justice is different from other forms of justice in that it does not involve social comparison.
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47
Harmonic justice is an interpersonal practice of fairness that focuses a communicator's attention on her communication partner's legitimate interests to survive and thrive.
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48
The communication act of acknowledgment is a practice of harmonic justice.
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k this deck
49
The ethical value of freedom concerns the absence of coercion and constraint.
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k this deck
50
Orlando Patterson suggests we think of freedom as a musical chord of three notes-personal freedom, sovereignal freedom, and civility.
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k this deck
51
Personal freedom is the freedom to do what you wish, if you do not harm others.
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52
Examples of Isaiah Belin's concept of negative freedom are found in the Bill of Rights of the US Constitution.
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53
Negative freedom protects people by establishing limits on the actions of others.
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54
Sovereignal freedom is the power to do what you want to do as far as you possibly can.
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55
Accountability for one's actions is important in both personal and sovereignal freedom.
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56
The experience of slavery, of both the master and the slave, is important in understanding the nature of all forms of freedom.
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57
The practice of freedom by individuals depends on their relationships to others who resources that maintain freedom.
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58
Civic freedom involves both rights and responsibility for participating in the life and governance of the community.
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59
Fulfilling civic responsibilities such as volunteering or voting, create resources that maintain the community, making rights such as freedom of speech possible.
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60
Understanding and meeting the needs of persons in our interpersonal relationships involves the value of care.
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61
The ethical value of care prioritizes the needs of others.
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62
All practices of care are ethical.
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63
Care acknowledges and incorporates emotions of the care-giver and cared-for.
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64
Listening is not a critical communication skill for practicing care.
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65
Julia Wood describes caring as a practice of selflessness typically limited to women.
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66
To be ethical, the practice of care must address only the needs of the cared-for.
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67
Addressing the needs of both the care-giver and care-for is necessary for the ethical practice of care.
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68
Integrity focuses on the private practice of an ethical value.
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69
Integrity focuses on consistent and public practice of an ethical value or principle.
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k this deck
70
Stephen Carter's definition of integrity does not require that the practice of integrity always be consistent.
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k this deck
71
Discerning what is right is the first step of Stephen Carter's definition of integrity.
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72
Publicly stating or explaining why you acted as you did is not important for integrity.
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k this deck
73
Encouraging public discussion and debate about what is ethical is one reason why it is important for integrity to be public.
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k this deck
74
Publicly explaining why we did what we did allows others to challenge and test our reasoning for rationalizations or other errors.
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k this deck
75
According to Stephen Carter, consistency alone lacks integrity.
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76
It is possible to act with consistency and still lack integrity.
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77
Compromise always lacks integrity.
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78
Answering the question "Will this compromise help me move toward my goal of practicing this ethical value or principle?" helps identify integrity-preserving compromise.
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79
Acts of respect communicate honor.
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80
All honor is ethical.
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