Ethics Final Examination
Ethics Final Examination
Ethics Final Examination
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
Final Examination
GE10 Ethics
Directions: MULTIPLE CHOICE. Write your answer on the space provided before the number.
STRICLTY NO ERASURE! One point deduction on every erasure.
C 4. It is a thesis that pleasure or happiness is the good that we seek and that we should seek.
a. Consequentialism c. Hedonism
b. Utilitarianism d. Universalism
A 6. “the new movie I had just seen was a good one because I enjoyed it”
a. Aesthetics c. Technique and technical
b. Etiquette d. Attitude
D 7. “a song I had just heard on the radio was a bad one because it had and unpleasant tone”
a. Attitude c. Technique and technical
b. Etiquette d. Aesthetics
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
A 10. Reports how people, particularly groups, make their moral valuations without making any
judgment either for or against these valuations.
a. Descriptive study of Ethics c. Standard study of Ethics
b. Informative study of Ethics d. Normative study of Ethics
C 11. “A friend of mine chooses to steal from the store, and I make an assessment that it is wrong.”
a. Moral Issue c. Moral Decision
b. Moral Dilemma d. Moral Judgement
B 12. Right and wrong action but not grave enough to belong to the discussion on ethics.
a. Obligations c. Ideals
b. Etiquette d. Prohibitions
B 14. It is a more complicated situation wherein one is torn between choosing one of two goods or
choosing between the lesser of two evils.
a. Moral Issue c. Moral Decision
b. Moral Dilemma d. Moral Judgement
D 16. Specific beliefs or attitudes that people have or to describe acts that people perform.
a. Ethics c. Culture
b. Religion d. Morals
A 17. It equips man with a (theoretical) knowledge of the morality of the human acts.
a. Ethics c. Morality
b. Religion d. Morals
D 18. If morality, therefore, is the practice of Ethics, morality, then, should be properly called as
a. Applied Morality c. Applied Standards
b. Applied Ethics d. Applied Ethical Standards
B 20. “Human beings are naturally self-centered, so all our actions are always already motivated by our
self-interest.” This is under the theory of
a. Subjectivism c. Ethical Egoism
b. Psychological Egoism d. Moral Egoism
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
C 21. It says that the Result or the Consequence of an Act is the real measure of whether it is good or
bad.
a. Natural Law c. Utilitarianism
b. Common Good d. Egoism
C 23. Ethics is also called Moral Philosophy, or precisely, the other name of Ethics is
a. Applied Morality c. Moral Philosophy
b. Applied Ethics d. Moral Theology
D 24. It prescribes what we ought to maintain as our standards or bases for moral valuation.
a. Descriptive study of Ethics c. Standard study of Ethics
b. Informative study of Ethics d. Normative study of Ethics
B 26. It can be spoken of as giving someone a “reason” for acting in a certain way.
a. Love of Desire c. Rewarding Pleasure
b. Fear of Punishment d. Desire for Compensation
A 27. It is the law that pertains on God’s perfect plan, not fully knowable to humans.
a. Eternal Law c. Divine Law
b. Natural Law d. Civil Law
C 28. It is primarily from the Bible, guided individuals beyond the world to "eternal happiness" in
what St. Augustine had called the "City of God."
a. Eternal Law c. Divine Law
b. Natural Law d. Civil Law
A 29. Imagine a situation wherein a person cannot afford a certain item, but the possibility presents
itself for her to steal it. Which ethical dimension of human existence does this belong?
a. Moral Issue c. Moral Decision
b. Moral Dilemma d. Moral Judgement
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
D 31. It is a systematic attempt to establish the validity of maintaining certain moral principles.
a. Natural Law c. Ethics
b. Common Good d. Moral Theory
A 33. Rules and regulations that are posited or put forward by an authority figure that require
compliance. This kind of law is called
a. Positive Law c. Civil Law
b. Human Law d. Primary Law
C 34. It can certainly motivate us to act, but not in themselves a determinant of the rightness or
wrongness of a certain way of acting or of the good or the bad in a particular pursuit.
a. Terror of Punishment and Longing for Reward
b. Fear of Penalty and Joyful Reward
c. Fear of Punishment and Desire for Reward
d. None of the above
A 35. The law does not tell us what we should do; it works from constraining us from performing acts
that we should not do. In what nature of law does this statement speaks?
a. Prohibitive nature of law c. Descriptive nature of law.
b. Normative nature of law d. Unreasonable nature of law.
A 37. “Love the Lord, your God, therefore, and always heed his charge: his statutes, decrees, and
commandments.”
a. The Authority of One’s Religion
b. The authority of the Law
c. The authority of one’s own Culture
C 38. In religious sensitivity, one is obliged to obey his/her God in all things. This referred to as
a. Cultural command theory c. Eternal command theory
b. Natural command theory d. Divine command theory
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
A 41. Bad things that we should avoid; the right ways in which we could or should act and the wrong
ways of acting. This is the primary concern of
a. Ethics c. Morality
b. Law d. Religion
C 43. Which of the following is the proper way (or right way) of doing things?
a. Attitude c. Technique and technical
b. Etiquette d. Aesthetics
B 44. This is about determining the grounds for the values with particular and special significance to
human life
a. Law c. Morality
b. Ethics d. Religion
B 46. A way of recognizing our being in the world with others. This statement belongs to a theory
called
a. Subjectivism c. Ethical Egoism
b. Psychological Egoism d. Moral Egoism
C 48. Purpose or motive, act or rule, and results or consequences are areas of emphasis in
a. Making moral judgments c. Making moral dilemma
b. Making moral decision d. Making moral issue
A 49. A theory that considers a right action is that which produces the greatest good consequences
and the least bad.
a. Consequentialism c. Maximalism
b. Universalism d. Hedonism
D 50. An English philosopher, political radical and legal and social reformer of the early Modern
period.
a. John Stuart Mill c. Mahatma Gandhi
b. Aristotle d. Jeremy Bentham
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
A 51. The starting point of this theory is the recognition that the individual thinking person is at the
heart of all moral valuations.
a. Subjectivism c. Ethical Egoism
b. Psychological Egoism d. Moral Egoism
D 52. The more radical claim of this theory is that the individual is the sole determinant of what is
morally good or bad, right or wrong. What is this theory?
a. Moral Egoism c. Ethical Egoism
b. Psychological Egoism d. Subjectivism
A 54. This theory exposes that the consequences to be considered are those of everyone affected, and
everyone equally.
a. Consequentialism c. Universalism
b. Maximalism d. Hedonism
A 55. According to Jeremy Bentham an action is right if and only if it produces the greatest balance of
pleasure over pain for the greatest number. What kind of utilitarianism is this?
a. Hedonistic Utilitarianism c. Rule Utilitarianism
b. Act Utilitarianism d. Actual Utilitarianism
B 57. This is a theory that describes the underlying dynamic behind all human actions.
a. Subjectivism c. Ethical Egoism
b. Psychological Egoism d. Moral Egoism
D 58. Who is the medieval Roman Catholic scholar who reconciled the political philosophy of Aristotle
with Christian faith?
a. St. Anselm c. St. Bonaventure
b. St. Augustine of Hippo d. St. Thomas Aquinas
B 59. This is a belief that what is ethically acceptable and unacceptable is relative to, or that is to say,
dependent of one’s culture.
a. Cultural belief c. Cultural relationship
b. Cultural relativism d. Cultural affiliation
B 60. Which of the following theories that does not suppose all our actions are inevitably self-serving?
a. Ethical Egoism c. Subjectivism
b. Psychological Egoism d. Moral Egoism
Bonus questions:
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
A •According to John Stuart Mill, an action is right if and only if it conforms to a set of rules the
general acceptance of which would produce the greatest balance of pleasure over pain for the greatest
number.
a. Subjectivism c. Rule Utilitarianism
b. Act Utilitarianism d. Utilitarianism
A •A discipline of studying and understanding ideal human behaviour and ideal ways of thinking.
a. Ethics c. Morality
b. Logic d. Psychology
B •Ethics provides principles or bases of right or wrong and good or bad actions, ________
actualizes the theory.
a. Ethics c. Morality
b. Morals d. Psychology
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