CRJ 305 Module 8 Progress Test
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| 1. | Justifications for punishment that appeal to beneficial consequences (incapacitation, deterrence, and rehabilitation) violate Kant’s second variation of the categorical imperative.
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| 2. | Human needs and desires are best met by cooperating with others.
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| 3. | Dignity is not something that people must earn or lose through their actions according to Kantian ethics.
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| 4. | Utilitarianism could allow for disproportionately harsh or lenient penalties if their imposition would achieve the desired end of crime prevention.
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| 5. | According to Kant, we should always tell the truth—no matter what.
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| 6. | The goal of disablement is to change the inclinations, motives, habits, and character of the offender so that he or she no longer desires to engage in criminal activities.
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| 7. | Aristotle argued that virtue was best regarded as an overarching quality of goodness and excellence, not as individual traits.
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| 8. | According to virtue ethics, consequentialist and deontological theories fail to consider the types of people we should be.
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| 9. | Under rights-based ethics, certain duties can and should be violated if we determine that other duties override them in a given situation.
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| 10. | Carliss Lamont argued that people experience their deepest and most enduring joys in association with their peers, friends, or family.
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10 years ago
CRJ 305 Module 8 Progress Test
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