Deck 2: What Is Death What Does Death Mean

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Question
The novel Frankenstein was strongly influenced by all the following EXCEPT the:

A) ongoing galvanic experiments
B) ongoing stealing and market of corpses
C) the Prometheus myth
D) its aged author's own preparation for death.
Use Space or
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Question
Darwin's shipboard experiments demonstrated thanatomimesis, which occurs when a:

A) dead animal is resuscitated by galvanic stimulation
B) live animal deliberately appears to be dead in order to avoid being killed
C) dead animal continues to move after it is no longer breathing
D) live animal consumes a dead animal for food.
Question
The position that death is not a sudden, massive event, but rather a complex process that takes place over time is promoted by:

A) Mary Shelley
B) Charles Darwin
C) Kenneth Iserson
D) Bakr Abu Zaid.
Question
"What then is death? It's not much of anything-simply one more event in a sequence that has no intrinsic meaning or value." This view can be found in:

A) On the Nature of Things (Lucretius)
B) the Old Testament (Christianity)
C) the New Testament (Christianity)
D) Islamic writings.
Question
The "deathification of sex" and the "sexualization of death" are associated with the teaching of:

A) Islam
B) the book of James and other passages in the New Testament (Christianity)
C) the Old Testament (Christianity)
D) Darwin.
Question
A New Age view of death is most similar to the views of:

A) Epicurus
B) the New Testament (Christianity)
C) Islam
D) the Harvard criteria.
Question
The perspective that death is subject to question, challenge, and revision like any other concept refers to:

A) healthy skepticism
B) symbolic construction
C) constructive symbolism
D) death denial.
Question
Mark Twain's account of the municipal "dead house" in Munich highlighted the practice of:

A) finding people who were alive but had been mistakenly pronounced dead
B) dropping hot wax on corpses to search for twitching as a sign of life
C) holding a mirror up to the nose and mouth of corpses to see if their breath was moist
D) using a wire to connect each corpse to a bell which would ring if any movement occurred.
Question
Jack Kevorkian, M.D. believed that this bodily function was the most reliable way to determine if a person is dead:

A) respiration
B) skin temperature
C) skin coloration
D) the condition of the eye.
Question
For more than 50 years, unresponsive patients considered as "beyond coma" have been known as having the following condition:

A) melancholia
B) metacomatosis
C) respirator brain
D) silent brain.
Question
Which of the following Harvard criteria would NOT have been familiar to physicians who practiced a century ago?

A) Unreceptive and unresponsive
B) No circulation to or within the brain
C) No reflexes
D) No movement and no breathing
Question
A transient vegetative state is defined by:

A) the cause
B) the duration
C) the location of damage in the brain
D) evidence of reflexes.
Question
The condition known to have been caused by brain damage that might be moderated or reversed is referred to as what type of vegetative state?

A) transient
B) akinetic
C) persistent
D) minimal.
Question
In 2008, the President's Council on Bioethics issued a report that examined various perspectives on what is considered to be the most significant development pertaining to death up to this point in time. This phenomenon is known as:

A) minimally conscious state
B) total brain failure
C) brain death
D) whole brain death.
Question
Which interpretation of death was associated with Mesopotamians and the ancient Greeks thousands of years ago?

A) Death is nothing.
B) Death is an enfeebled form of life.
C) Death is perpetual development.
D) Death is waiting.
Question
This interpretation of death was exemplified among ancient Egyptians and modern African groups:

A) Death is nothing.
B) Death is continuation.
C) Death is perpetual development.
D) Death is waiting.
Question
Evolutionary biology and philosophy stimulated the view of death as a time of:

A) cycling and recycling
B) enfeebled life
C) perpetual development
D) waiting.
Question
Which view of death emphasizes the three phases of suspension, judgment, and disposition?

A) perpetual development
B) continuation
C) waiting
D) cycling and recycling.
Question
Reincarnation, transmigration and rebirth as well as the symbolic Phoenix represent this interpretation of the death state:

A) perpetual development
B) continuation
C) waiting
D) cycling and recycling.
Question
The wheel is a core symbol of life and death for those who practice:

A) Buddhism
B) Shintoism
C) Islam
D) Judaism.
Question
Buddhism describes nirvana, the ultimate goal beyond the cycle of rebirths, as a state of:

A) nothing
B) continuation
C) enfeeblement
D) waiting
Question
"Whoever touches the dead body of anyone will be unclean for seven days." This attitude toward death and the dead was expressed in the:

A) Old Testament
B) New Testament
C) Quran (Koran)
D) Tibetan Book of the Dead.
Question
The ancient Greeks personified Death (Thanatos) as a twin brother to:

A) the Ruler of the Deep (Poseidon)
B) the Ruler of the Gods (Zeus)
C) Inebriation (Bacchus)
D) Sleep (Hypnos).
Question
Orpheus represented:

A) the power of forgetfulness of life's sorrows
B) the power of music over death
C) the power of revenge over both life and death
D) safety on the journey from life to death.
Question
Personifications of death have helped people to cope with death by:

A) objectifying an abstract concept
B) expressing feelings that are difficult to put into words
C) absorbing some of the shock, pain, anger, and fear that is experienced as a result of traumatic events
D) all of the above.
Question
The personifications of death found in the 1971 pioneering study included all of the following EXCEPT the:

A) gentle comforter
B) macabre
C) time keeper
D) gay deceiver.
Question
A 1997 follow-up study of death personifications found that:

A) Dr. Jack Kevorkian has emerged as a new image for death-the releaser
B) there has been a sharp increase in female personifications
C) women have more "grim and terrifying" images than men
D) all of the above.
Question
We recognize social death by observing how:

A) people behave when they think they are not being observed
B) a person is treated by others
C) healthy and vigorous a person seems to be
D) intelligent a person seems to be.
Question
The Affordable Care Act (ACA), capital punishment, and right-to die debates are examples of Foucault's notion of:

A) purgatory
B) social justice
C) necro-elitism
D) biopower.
Question
An individual who feels a "partial death" due to the loss of the ability to conceive children is experiencing:

A) phenomenological death
B) parapsychological death
C) social death
D) proxy death.
Question
The components of The Undead Complex include all of the following EXCEPT:

A) something mysterious happens between life and death and between death and life
B) scary stuff, because the decomposition of the body is so repulsive
C) something explosive happens as reanimated corpses leave the ground
D) sacred stuff because gods control the life and death cycle.
Question
Works of art commissioned during medieval times often displayed the theme of death as the:

A) great leveler
B) great validator
C) ultimate solution
D) ultimate meaningless event.
Question
Large and expensive funerals entered American life:

A) in the colonial days
B) after the Civil War
C) during the 1890s
D) after World War II.
Question
Studies have found that obituaries in big city newspapers:

A) give equal attention to the deaths of men and women
B) give more space and often use more photographs in reporting the death of men
C) print more photographs relating to women's deaths
D) are usually written by women.
Question
The Prometheus story, about a young man who becomes alive again after dying, inspired Mary Shelley's writings.
Question
The people of many world societies have long believed that death is marked by the separation of soul from body.
Question
Before the emergence of Christianity, other religions in the ancient world had emphasized a connection between withering away and fertility.
Question
Suicide and martyrdom, especially in earlier eras, were seen by some Christians as a preferred alternative to sexual indulgence.
Question
Schultz and Huet (2000/2001) found that in popular and award-winning films, male characters were six times more likely to instigate death and female characters were twice as likely to be the victims.
Question
In the past, people who experienced a stroke, epileptic seizure, or diabetic coma might have been pronounced as dead instead of receiving treatment.
Question
Catatonia is a neurological condition in which a person is conscious and able to think but cannot move any part of the body except the eyes.
Question
Akinetic mutism is defined by an inability of the human brain to initiate action or speak even with preserved sensorimotor pathways.
Question
According a report issued by the President's Council on Bioethics (2008), the term "total brain failure" excludes "death" because this condition should be verified rather than just being assumed.
Question
According to Kastenbaum, virtual reality has decreased the significance of the actual body of the deceased having to be a part of funeral rites and memorialization.
Question
The Catholic concept of "purgatory" was advocated by Luther and Calvin as a state of suspension.
Question
In Homer's epic, The Odyssey, the sailors are visited by a hybrid bird-person with heads that resemble women, who lures them to their death.
Question
Utilization of the skeleton as a symbol of death developed in medieval Europe.
Question
In a 1971 study of the ways we personify death, masculine personifications were given much more frequently than feminine.
Question
In the 1971 study of death personifications, most respondents viewed death as grim and terrifying.
Question
In a 1997 follow-up study of death personifications, women continued to favor the image of death as the "gentle comforter" while men described death as a "cold and remote" person.
Question
Feeling dead to one's self due to drug and alcohol use, or simply from aging, represents a part of phenomenological death.
Question
Biomedical developments and portrayal of vampires and zombies as the Undead continue to foster ambiguity about the borderline between "alive" and "dead."
Question
Unlike zombies, revenants and vampires have been associated largely with the voodoo religion and Creole culture as practiced in Haiti, West Africa, and areas of the U.S. South.
Question
Islam's history involving men and women being expected to wear special garments, ihram, on the annual pilgrimage to Mecca, exemplifies the idea of death as the Great Validator.
Question
Fatal accidents are one example of a random, meaningless death event.
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Biopower
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Brain death
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Catatonia
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Coma, comatose
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-EEG
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Ihram
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Intravenous fluids
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Martyrdom
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Minimally conscious state
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Necropolitics
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Nirvana
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Purgatory
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Revenant
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Thanatopolitics
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Transient vegetative state
Question
Vampire
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Vegetative state
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Virtual reality
Question
What is the definition of the terms

-Zombie
Question
List any five of the common signs used in the traditional determination of death.
Question
Name the five Harvard criteria for brain death.
Question
What is the difference between viewing death as an event versus a state?
Question
Describe any three of the meanings that have been given to death.
Question
Describe two problems that may be encountered when telling a child that death is a long sleep.
Question
Explain how Kastenbaum reached the conclusion that the view of the New Age and Wicca movements toward death is more similar to that of Islam than to the views of Epicurus, Christianity, or the Harvard criteria. Fully describe each view of death in your response.
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Deck 2: What Is Death What Does Death Mean
1
The novel Frankenstein was strongly influenced by all the following EXCEPT the:

A) ongoing galvanic experiments
B) ongoing stealing and market of corpses
C) the Prometheus myth
D) its aged author's own preparation for death.
D
2
Darwin's shipboard experiments demonstrated thanatomimesis, which occurs when a:

A) dead animal is resuscitated by galvanic stimulation
B) live animal deliberately appears to be dead in order to avoid being killed
C) dead animal continues to move after it is no longer breathing
D) live animal consumes a dead animal for food.
B
3
The position that death is not a sudden, massive event, but rather a complex process that takes place over time is promoted by:

A) Mary Shelley
B) Charles Darwin
C) Kenneth Iserson
D) Bakr Abu Zaid.
C
4
"What then is death? It's not much of anything-simply one more event in a sequence that has no intrinsic meaning or value." This view can be found in:

A) On the Nature of Things (Lucretius)
B) the Old Testament (Christianity)
C) the New Testament (Christianity)
D) Islamic writings.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The "deathification of sex" and the "sexualization of death" are associated with the teaching of:

A) Islam
B) the book of James and other passages in the New Testament (Christianity)
C) the Old Testament (Christianity)
D) Darwin.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
A New Age view of death is most similar to the views of:

A) Epicurus
B) the New Testament (Christianity)
C) Islam
D) the Harvard criteria.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The perspective that death is subject to question, challenge, and revision like any other concept refers to:

A) healthy skepticism
B) symbolic construction
C) constructive symbolism
D) death denial.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Mark Twain's account of the municipal "dead house" in Munich highlighted the practice of:

A) finding people who were alive but had been mistakenly pronounced dead
B) dropping hot wax on corpses to search for twitching as a sign of life
C) holding a mirror up to the nose and mouth of corpses to see if their breath was moist
D) using a wire to connect each corpse to a bell which would ring if any movement occurred.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Jack Kevorkian, M.D. believed that this bodily function was the most reliable way to determine if a person is dead:

A) respiration
B) skin temperature
C) skin coloration
D) the condition of the eye.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
For more than 50 years, unresponsive patients considered as "beyond coma" have been known as having the following condition:

A) melancholia
B) metacomatosis
C) respirator brain
D) silent brain.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Which of the following Harvard criteria would NOT have been familiar to physicians who practiced a century ago?

A) Unreceptive and unresponsive
B) No circulation to or within the brain
C) No reflexes
D) No movement and no breathing
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
A transient vegetative state is defined by:

A) the cause
B) the duration
C) the location of damage in the brain
D) evidence of reflexes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The condition known to have been caused by brain damage that might be moderated or reversed is referred to as what type of vegetative state?

A) transient
B) akinetic
C) persistent
D) minimal.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
In 2008, the President's Council on Bioethics issued a report that examined various perspectives on what is considered to be the most significant development pertaining to death up to this point in time. This phenomenon is known as:

A) minimally conscious state
B) total brain failure
C) brain death
D) whole brain death.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Which interpretation of death was associated with Mesopotamians and the ancient Greeks thousands of years ago?

A) Death is nothing.
B) Death is an enfeebled form of life.
C) Death is perpetual development.
D) Death is waiting.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
This interpretation of death was exemplified among ancient Egyptians and modern African groups:

A) Death is nothing.
B) Death is continuation.
C) Death is perpetual development.
D) Death is waiting.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Evolutionary biology and philosophy stimulated the view of death as a time of:

A) cycling and recycling
B) enfeebled life
C) perpetual development
D) waiting.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Which view of death emphasizes the three phases of suspension, judgment, and disposition?

A) perpetual development
B) continuation
C) waiting
D) cycling and recycling.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Reincarnation, transmigration and rebirth as well as the symbolic Phoenix represent this interpretation of the death state:

A) perpetual development
B) continuation
C) waiting
D) cycling and recycling.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The wheel is a core symbol of life and death for those who practice:

A) Buddhism
B) Shintoism
C) Islam
D) Judaism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Buddhism describes nirvana, the ultimate goal beyond the cycle of rebirths, as a state of:

A) nothing
B) continuation
C) enfeeblement
D) waiting
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
"Whoever touches the dead body of anyone will be unclean for seven days." This attitude toward death and the dead was expressed in the:

A) Old Testament
B) New Testament
C) Quran (Koran)
D) Tibetan Book of the Dead.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The ancient Greeks personified Death (Thanatos) as a twin brother to:

A) the Ruler of the Deep (Poseidon)
B) the Ruler of the Gods (Zeus)
C) Inebriation (Bacchus)
D) Sleep (Hypnos).
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Orpheus represented:

A) the power of forgetfulness of life's sorrows
B) the power of music over death
C) the power of revenge over both life and death
D) safety on the journey from life to death.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Personifications of death have helped people to cope with death by:

A) objectifying an abstract concept
B) expressing feelings that are difficult to put into words
C) absorbing some of the shock, pain, anger, and fear that is experienced as a result of traumatic events
D) all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
The personifications of death found in the 1971 pioneering study included all of the following EXCEPT the:

A) gentle comforter
B) macabre
C) time keeper
D) gay deceiver.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
A 1997 follow-up study of death personifications found that:

A) Dr. Jack Kevorkian has emerged as a new image for death-the releaser
B) there has been a sharp increase in female personifications
C) women have more "grim and terrifying" images than men
D) all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
We recognize social death by observing how:

A) people behave when they think they are not being observed
B) a person is treated by others
C) healthy and vigorous a person seems to be
D) intelligent a person seems to be.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The Affordable Care Act (ACA), capital punishment, and right-to die debates are examples of Foucault's notion of:

A) purgatory
B) social justice
C) necro-elitism
D) biopower.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
An individual who feels a "partial death" due to the loss of the ability to conceive children is experiencing:

A) phenomenological death
B) parapsychological death
C) social death
D) proxy death.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
The components of The Undead Complex include all of the following EXCEPT:

A) something mysterious happens between life and death and between death and life
B) scary stuff, because the decomposition of the body is so repulsive
C) something explosive happens as reanimated corpses leave the ground
D) sacred stuff because gods control the life and death cycle.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Works of art commissioned during medieval times often displayed the theme of death as the:

A) great leveler
B) great validator
C) ultimate solution
D) ultimate meaningless event.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Large and expensive funerals entered American life:

A) in the colonial days
B) after the Civil War
C) during the 1890s
D) after World War II.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Studies have found that obituaries in big city newspapers:

A) give equal attention to the deaths of men and women
B) give more space and often use more photographs in reporting the death of men
C) print more photographs relating to women's deaths
D) are usually written by women.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
The Prometheus story, about a young man who becomes alive again after dying, inspired Mary Shelley's writings.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The people of many world societies have long believed that death is marked by the separation of soul from body.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Before the emergence of Christianity, other religions in the ancient world had emphasized a connection between withering away and fertility.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Suicide and martyrdom, especially in earlier eras, were seen by some Christians as a preferred alternative to sexual indulgence.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Schultz and Huet (2000/2001) found that in popular and award-winning films, male characters were six times more likely to instigate death and female characters were twice as likely to be the victims.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
In the past, people who experienced a stroke, epileptic seizure, or diabetic coma might have been pronounced as dead instead of receiving treatment.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Catatonia is a neurological condition in which a person is conscious and able to think but cannot move any part of the body except the eyes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Akinetic mutism is defined by an inability of the human brain to initiate action or speak even with preserved sensorimotor pathways.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
According a report issued by the President's Council on Bioethics (2008), the term "total brain failure" excludes "death" because this condition should be verified rather than just being assumed.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
According to Kastenbaum, virtual reality has decreased the significance of the actual body of the deceased having to be a part of funeral rites and memorialization.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
The Catholic concept of "purgatory" was advocated by Luther and Calvin as a state of suspension.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
In Homer's epic, The Odyssey, the sailors are visited by a hybrid bird-person with heads that resemble women, who lures them to their death.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Utilization of the skeleton as a symbol of death developed in medieval Europe.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
In a 1971 study of the ways we personify death, masculine personifications were given much more frequently than feminine.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
In the 1971 study of death personifications, most respondents viewed death as grim and terrifying.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
In a 1997 follow-up study of death personifications, women continued to favor the image of death as the "gentle comforter" while men described death as a "cold and remote" person.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Feeling dead to one's self due to drug and alcohol use, or simply from aging, represents a part of phenomenological death.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Biomedical developments and portrayal of vampires and zombies as the Undead continue to foster ambiguity about the borderline between "alive" and "dead."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
Unlike zombies, revenants and vampires have been associated largely with the voodoo religion and Creole culture as practiced in Haiti, West Africa, and areas of the U.S. South.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
Islam's history involving men and women being expected to wear special garments, ihram, on the annual pilgrimage to Mecca, exemplifies the idea of death as the Great Validator.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
Fatal accidents are one example of a random, meaningless death event.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
What is the definition of the terms

-Biopower
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
What is the definition of the terms

-Brain death
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
What is the definition of the terms

-Catatonia
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
What is the definition of the terms

-Coma, comatose
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
What is the definition of the terms

-EEG
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
What is the definition of the terms

-Ihram
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
What is the definition of the terms

-Intravenous fluids
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
What is the definition of the terms

-Martyrdom
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
What is the definition of the terms

-Minimally conscious state
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65
What is the definition of the terms

-Necropolitics
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66
What is the definition of the terms

-Nirvana
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67
What is the definition of the terms

-Purgatory
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68
What is the definition of the terms

-Revenant
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69
What is the definition of the terms

-Thanatopolitics
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70
What is the definition of the terms

-Transient vegetative state
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71
Vampire
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72
What is the definition of the terms

-Vegetative state
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73
What is the definition of the terms

-Virtual reality
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74
What is the definition of the terms

-Zombie
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75
List any five of the common signs used in the traditional determination of death.
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76
Name the five Harvard criteria for brain death.
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77
What is the difference between viewing death as an event versus a state?
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78
Describe any three of the meanings that have been given to death.
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79
Describe two problems that may be encountered when telling a child that death is a long sleep.
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80
Explain how Kastenbaum reached the conclusion that the view of the New Age and Wicca movements toward death is more similar to that of Islam than to the views of Epicurus, Christianity, or the Harvard criteria. Fully describe each view of death in your response.
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