Students
Please note: This title has recently been acquired by Taylor & Francis. Due to rights reasons, any multimedia resources will no longer be available.
Learning Objectives
After reading these chapters, you should be able to:
- Explain the role of a "savior baby" and the ethical issues surrounding PGD.
- Recognize the ethics of selective abortion for disability.
- Discuss the historical context of cloning and reproductive technologies.
- List the options made available through genetic screening.
- Summarize the debate surrounding stem cell research.
- Analyze the viability of cloning and the broader fears emerging from the development of new technology regarding human biology.
- Identify the issues surrounding the ethics of enhancement.
- Identify the ethical issues unique to reducing a multiple pregnancy.
- Summarize the statistics, laws, and facts regarding pregnancy and fetal development that provide a basis for the abortion debate
- Recognize criteria put forth for defining personhood.
- Explain gradualism as a way to understand moral status.
- Analyze the question of abortion from the position of the natural law tradition.
- Discuss the principle of the double effect as it relates to abortion.
- List ethical questions regarding abortion in addition to the question of moral permissibility.
- Discuss the role of hospice.
- Explain the difference between active and passive euthanasia.
- Recognize attacks on the moral significance of the active/passive distinction.
- Distinguish between consequentialist and deontological approaches.
- Define voluntary, involuntary, and nonvoluntary euthanasia.
- Understand the difference between assisted and unassisted euthanasia.
- Identify two principal points on which those who stress the sanctity of life differ from those who argue in favor of a right to die.
- Summarize the slippery slope argument in euthanasia.
- List the statistics related to crime and punishment in America.
- Recognize ways in which the U.S. criminal justice system is exceptional in the world.
- Identify backward looking theories and forward-looking theories as approaches to punishment.
- Recall the difference between deontological and consequentialist approaches.
- Discuss the differences between retribution and revenge.
- Explain specific deterrence and general or indirect deterrence.
- Summarize the role of rehabilitation in punishment.
- Analyze arguments for and against the death penalty.
- Recognize the moral costs of war to the soldiers who serve.
- Summarize the history of just war theory.
- List conditions that must be met if entrance into a war is to be considered just.
- Discuss three conditions necessary for the just conduct of war.
- Recall the four principal conditions of the principle of double effect.
- Identify means of war that are considered evil in themselves.
- List conditions for a just peace.
- Analyze the limitations of just war theory with regards to terrorism.
- Explain the two extremes of pacifism and Realpolitik relative to just war theory.
- Define the terms race and ethnicity.
- Discuss empirical issues relating to racial differences in the United States.
- Explain racism as both a descriptive and an evaluative term.
- Analyze the role of compensatory programs.
- Recognize separatist, assimilationist, and pluralist models of the place of race and ethnicity in society.
- Summarize equal rights, affirmative action, special protection, and market-based approaches to eliminating discrimination.
- Explain the notion of justice as fairness.
- Identify the different arguments in favor of hate crime laws.
- Distinguish between sexist attitudes and sexist behavior.
- Explain overt and institutional sexism.
- Analyze sexism in language.
- Discuss types of harassment.
- Recognize three models of the place of gender in society.
- Summarize the nature-nurture controversy as it relates to gender roles.
- Identify the level of gender equality internationally.
- Recognize the view that gay rights are human rights.
- Discuss the complexity in defining sexual orientation.
- Explain the ethical issues surrounding homosexuality.
- Summarize different senses of the term unnatural.
- Identify ways in which discrimination against homosexuals is unique.
- Analyze the state’s interest in sanctioning marriage in terms of its view on homosexuality.
- Recall the differences among toleration, acceptance, and endorsement.
- Recognize the extent of the problem of world poverty and world hunger.
- Discuss arguments in the case for helping other countries.
- Recall the difference between positive and negative rights.
- Distinguish between perfect duties and imperfect duties.
- Identify the human component of natural disasters.
- Analyze arguments in the case against helping other countries.
- Discuss some of the practices common in contemporary animal farming.
- Explain utilitarian concerns regarding the treatment of animals.
- Summarize the topic of animal rights.
- Identify the middle ground in the area of medical research on animals.
- Recognize the common ground in the debate over animal agriculture and eating meat.
- Discuss the ways in which Native Americans understand their relationship to the natural environment.
- Recognize the tension between science and religion.
- Identify three central questions that must be addressed when considering environmental ethics.
- Recall human-centered approaches to environmental ethics.
- Explain expanded circle approaches to environmental ethics.
- Analyze the problem of environmental racism and possible solutions.
- Summarize a Third World critique of the trend in American environmentalism.
- Recognize the codes of ethics that hackers use to describe their own activities.
- Discuss the emergence of a computer-mediated world.
- Explain how ethics arise in response to a policy vacuum.
- Summarize the concept of privacy and control of personal information.
- Identify the issues of free speech, privacy, and censorship.
- Analyze the impact of computers on property rights and intellectual property.
- Discuss the ways in which responsibility issues have been transformed.
Exams
Download All (ZIP 359KB)- Chapter 1 Exam - essay
- Chapter 1 Exam - multiple choice
- Chapter 2 Exam - essay
- Chapter 2 Exam - multiple choice
- Chapter 3 Exam - essay
- Chapter 3 Exam - multiple choice
- Chapter 4 Exam - essay
- Chapter 4 Exam - multiple choice
- Chapter 5 Exam - essay
- Chapter 5 Exam - multiple choice
- Chapter 6 Exam - essay
- Chapter 6 Exam - multiple choice
- Chapter 7 Exam - essay
- Chapter 7 Exam - multiple choice
- Chapter 8 Exam - essay
- Chapter 8 Exam - multiple choice
- Chapter 9 Exam - essay
- Chapter 9 Exam - multiple choice
- Chapter 10 Exam - essay
- Chapter 10 Exam - multiple choice
- Chapter 11 Exam - essay
- Chapter 11 Exam - multiple choice
- Chapter 12 Exam - essay
- Chapter 12 Exam - multiple choice
Weblinks
All links provided below were active on website launch. However, due to the dynamic nature of the Internet, links do occasionally become inactive. If you find a link that has become inactive, please try using a search engine to locate the website in question.
- Language Tip of the Week
June Casagrande, author of Grammar Snobs are Great Big Meanies. This site offers a useful language, usage and style tips on a weekly basis. - Dave's ESL Café
Professor Dave Sperling This site offers a wide range of resources for students and teachers of English as a second language, including language learning resources, job postings, and discussion forums.