Test Bank Docx An Overview Of Ethics Chapter 1 1st Edition - Justice Ethics 1e | Test Bank Sloan by John J. Sloan. DOCX document preview.
Chapter 1
Test Bank
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 01
1) Norms are formal rules that make social order possible.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 02
2) The statuses we occupy over the course of our lives do not have norms attached to them.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 03
3) Normative morality describes codes of conduct developed and put forth by a group (e.g., Judaism) or codes accepted by an individual as binding on her behavior (e.g., a Hasidic Jew).
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 04
4) In many groups, etiquette may be considered part of the group’s moral code.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 05
5) When “morality” is referring to a general code of conduct put forward by a group that is separate from etiquette, law, and religion, it is being used in a descriptive sense.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 06
6) Morality describes an all-encompassing code of conduct applicable to all who are rational, understand the rules, and are willing to abide by them.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 07
7) Ethics provides justifications for why behavior proscribed by morality should be proscribed.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 08
8) An example of a topic in normative ethics is whether morality exists
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 09
9) Researchers in moral psychology differ on what motivates people to be moral.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 10
10) One debate among moral psychologists is over how men and women experience reality.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 11
11) One interest among moral psychologists is with determining whether morality is grounded in a distinctly male-centered (patriarchal) view of the world.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 12
12) Deontological ethics rejects consequences as the determining consideration for whether behavior is ethical or not.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 13
13) Virtue ethics suggests that duty to self and to others is key to living a proper life.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 14
14) Normative ethics develops codified (written) sets of principles, standards, or rules that apply to professionals.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 15
15) The values-predisposition perspective suggests that criminal justice practitioners (e.g., police officers) bring with them specific values that those choosing careers outside the criminal justice field do not necessarily possess.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 16
16) The occupational career of a criminal justice practitioner involves a process during which he or she is selected, trained, and socialized, that ultimately results in him or her reorganizing his or her identity as no longer that of a “citizen” but, for example, a “police officer” or “correctional officer.”
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 01 Question 17
17) The crime control and due process “models” of the criminal justice process suggest that terminal and instrumental values have no place in the operation of the criminal justice system.
a. True
b. False
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 18
18) Which of the following would be an example of a formal norm?
a. Using a salad fork at dinner
b. A man wearing a suit to a job interview
c. A law requiring a picture ID and other documents to vote
d. A woman’s family being required to present a dowry to the prospective groom
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 19
19) Which of the following would be an example of an ascribed status?
a. Crown prince
b. CEO of Apple
c. College professor
d. Homeless person
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 20
20) Which of the following describes codes of conduct relevant only under specific conditions (e.g., a time of war) and would likely be agreed upon by most rational people?
a. Morality
b. Normative morality
c. Descriptive morality
d. Ethics
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 21
21) Law involves which of the following?
a. Relatively significant penalties associated with violating them
b. Explicit written rules
c. Officials responsible for interpreting the rules
d. All of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 22
22) One who meets certain intellectual and volitional conditions, especially the condition of being rational, would be considered:
a. Legally sane
b. A morally fit person
c. A moral agent
d. None of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 23
23) Deep-seated and enduring beliefs that specific conduct or end-states of existence are personally and/or socially preferable are known as:
a. Religious tenets
b. Systems of ethics
c. Obligations
d. Moral values
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 24
24) Ethics:
a. Is a branch of philosophy
b. Involves the systematic study of right and wrong behavior
c. Includes three subareas: metaethics, normative ethics, and applied ethics
d. All of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 25
25) Moral relativism suggests that:
a. Ethics are relative to time, place, and group
b. People create their own moral values and standards
c. The importance of moral obligations vary from time to time
d. None of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 26
26) Psychological egoism suggests people are moral because:
a. Doing so serves their own interests
b. Doing so serves the interests of the collective
c. Doing so is God’s will
d. All of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 27
27) A core argument of a care-based system of ethics is that:
a. The moral person ignores circumstances and instead uses reason to make moral judgments
b. The moral person is concerned more with context and less with abstract rules
c. Morality stresses rights and duties rather than circumstances and emotions
d. Morality is grounded in and shaped by activities such as governing societies
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 28
28) Which of the following is a branch of ethics that develops standards for morally acceptable conduct and justifies those standards using logic and reason?
a. Applied ethics
b. Metaethics
c. Normative ethics
d. Professional ethics
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 29
29) Teleological ethics:
a. Stresses that potential outcomes of behavior determines the ethics of that behavior
b. First became popular in Western philosophy during the 18th and 19th centuries
c. Includes ethical egoism and Utilitarian ethics
d. All of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 30
30) According to deontological ethics:
a. Ethical behavior is determined by the possible consequences of behavior
b. Duty to others isn’t important for determining the ethics of behavior
c. There are no universal standards for ethics
d. None of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 31
31) Applied ethics:
a. Is devoted to analyzing moral problems and the permissibility of specific actions or practices in certain areas of life such as economics or politics
b. Is interested in universal principles being used to guide the behavior of professionals such as lawyers
c. Would not be concerned with the ethics of eating meat or polluting the environment
d. None of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 32
32) The values-learned perspective suggests:
a. Practitioners bring to their jobs a specific set of values learned from family and community
b. Practitioners’ values are no different than those of people not involved with the criminal justice system
c. Values possessed by criminal justice practitioners are learned through a process of socialization occurring during hiring and training
d. None of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 33
33) The moral career of the criminal justice practitioner includes which of the following?
a. Apologia
b. Moral experiences
c. Stages
d. All of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 34
34) A key value of the crime control model includes:
a. Due process
b. Accountability
c. Constraining the police
d. Repression of crime and enhancement of public order
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 01 Question 35
35) __________ focuses on the potential outcomes of behavior, be they good or bad, to determine the ethics of behavior
a. Teleological Ethics
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 01 Question 36
36) _________ argues that the potential consequences of behavior for the actor should be the determining consideration for whether the behavior is ethical.
a. Ethical egoism
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 01 Question 37
37) The development of standards for morally acceptable conduct is a characteristic of ________ ethics.
a. Normative
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 01 Question 38
38) __________ is the study of the origin, meaning, and logic behind the principles that shape ethics.
a. Metaethics
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 01 Question 39
39) ______________ is a subarea in applied ethics that concerns itself with developing standards or codes of conduct for those involved in the practice of law and/or medicine.
a. Professional ethics
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 40
40) Distinguish morality from ethics. How are the two related? How do they differ?
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 41
41) Contrast teleological and deontological ethics. What are their key guiding principles? What are some examples of systems of ethics associated with each?
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 42
42) Compare a criminal justice practitioner’s occupational career with his or her moral career. What are the key stages in each? Ultimately, what are the two trying to explain?
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 01 Question 43
43) Identify and briefly discuss the core instrumental and terminal values found in the crime control and due process models of the criminal justice process.