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Return to Introduction to Politics 4e Student Resources
Chapter 5 Multiple Choice Questions
Freedom and Justice
Quiz Content
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Which of these is
not
usually seen as a constraint upon freedom?
Imprisonment.
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Suppression of peaceful political dissent.
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The inability to fly without mechanical aid.
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incorrect
The total prohibition of alcoholic stimulants and tobacco products.
correct
incorrect
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What does the idea of 'positive liberty' mean?
The state has the right to intervene in the hope of making people's lives more fulfilling.
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People should just get out there and do whatever they want.
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Only self-confident people can be free.
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Freedom means the absence of constraints deliberately imposed by other people.
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Isaiah Berlin argued that...
the state can and should do more to reduce economic inequalities.
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the criminal justice system is an unacceptable infringement of freedom.
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irrational people do not deserve freedom.
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'positive' conceptions of liberty represented a serious threat to freedom.
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What did John Stuart Mill argue?
Freedom is an essential means to human progress.
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Hurtful opinions and nasty name-calling should be stamped out by the law.
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All kinds of pleasure are equally valid.
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People should forcibly be prevented from harming themselves.
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Mill's 'harm principle' can be criticized because...
human beings are not necessarily made happier just because the law allows them ample freedom to make serious mistakes.
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it is not clear that any significant human action is purely 'self-regarding'.
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there are circumstances when the truth needs to be given legal protection against error.
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all of the above.
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What does procedural justice entail?
A fair distribution of income and wealth.
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An assurance that punishment should fit the crime.
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That decisions should be made in accordance with an established set of rules.
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That every offender should be tried in front of a judge and jury.
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In John Rawls's theory, principles of justice are established by people who are affected by what?
A veil of ignorance.
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A state of nature.
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Economic inequality.
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Short-sighted self-interest.
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Rawls's theory is vulnerable to criticism because...
it gives undue priority to liberty over equality.
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it seems to presuppose an affluent society rather than one which would be affected by serious scarcity.
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it overlooks the possibility that people in the 'original position' will enjoy taking risks.
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all of the above.
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An important difference between Robert Nozick's ideas and those of Rawls is that...
Nozick admires capitalism whereas Rawls rejects it.
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Rawls is more concerned with individual liberty.
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Nozick believes that people who acquire property through their labour should be allowed to keep it, while Rawls tries to justify a degree of redistributive taxation.
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Nozick is more willing to justify state intervention.
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According to the communitarian conception of justice...
the same rules should apply in all societies.
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justice means different things in different contexts.
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Western countries have a moral duty to intervene in 'rogue' states.
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the concept of the nation state is meaningless in a world of global citizenship.
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