Law > QUESTIONS & ANSWERS > CRJ220 Week 5 Quiz - Question and Answers (set 2) Latest all answers correct (verified) Strayer Univ (All)

CRJ220 Week 5 Quiz - Question and Answers (set 2) Latest all answers correct (verified) Strayer University.

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CRJ 220 - Ethics and Leadership in Criminal Justice • Question 1 2 out of 2 points If we eliminate free will completely, we would also be eliminating: • Question 2 2 out of 2 poi... nts Which of the following is sometimes held to be the only "event" for which there is no cause? • Question 3 2 out of 2 points If you were to argue that although a person with an IQ of 60 cannot be a world-renown physicist, s/he still has the freedom to choose within limits of what is physically, psychologically, and socially possible, you would be presenting which of the following positions? • Question 4 2 out of 2 points Self-defense and defense of others would be considered: • Question 5 2 out of 2 points In simplest terms, determinism holds that: • Question 6 2 out of 2 points The notion that every event has a cause is the central premise underlying: • Question 7 2 out of 2 points Identifying and incapacitating people we believe to be at high risk for future criminal activity before they have had the opportunity to commit those future criminal acts is a practice referred to as: • Question 8 2 out of 2 points Moral responsibility or blameworthiness that attaches to persons who freely and knowingly engage in wrongful actions is sometimes referred to as: • Question 9 2 out of 2 points Which of the following, though only in its infancy, may be the future standard for detecting dishonesty in police departments and courtrooms? • Question 10 2 out of 2 points If human beings are, by nature, hedonistic then we naturally seek: • Question 11 2 out of 2 points Advocates of which of the following often appeal to the harm principle to support their position: • Question 12 2 out of 2 points Which of the following might help us develop open-mindedness and the virtue of tolerance? • Question 13 2 out of 2 points Which of the following suggests that governments can and should pass laws to protect citizens from themselves, looking out for its citizens as a father might for his children? • Question 14 2 out of 2 points Which of the following positions holds that moral beliefs vary from person to person, and that one person's beliefs and practices cannot be said to be more right (or wrong) that any other person's? • Question 15 2 out of 2 points Planned, premeditated killings of family members whose behavior is judged to have brought shame or dishonor to the family are referred to as: • Question 16 2 out of 2 points Which of the following, derived from John Stuart Mill, suggests that governments can legitimately create and impose laws only where it is necessary to prevent people from harming others? • Question 17 2 out of 2 points When we are committed unquestioningly and with absolute certainty to a belief or beliefs, we are guilty of: • Question 18 2 out of 2 points When we claim that certain moral values or principles (e.g., do not steal) apply or should apply to all people, everywhere, we are saying that some values or principles are: • Question 19 2 out of 2 points Moral relativism is the idea that: • Question 20 2 out of 2 points The Comstock Act: • Question 21 2 out of 2 points Accepting gifts from inmates for special considerations (e.g., choice cells or job assignments) is a form of prison corruption categorized as: • Question 22 2 out of 2 points Which of the following involves rationalizing misconduct by perceiving informal norms – such as secrecy or loyalty to fellow officers – to be more important than societal laws, norms, or the formal norms of the organization by which one is employed? • Question 23 2 out of 2 points Which of the following explanations of police corruption diverts attention away from the possibility that corruption is systemic, arguing instead that corrupt acts are committed by only a few "bad" officers within otherwise ethical departments? • Question 24 2 out of 2 points If, as Plato and others have implied, human nature is egoistic then our actions are motivated by: • Question 25 2 out of 2 points With respect to religion and morality, the problem of common ground refers to the fact that religious commands and principles: • Question 26 2 out of 2 points Actions by law enforcement officers that exploit the powers of law enforcement for personal gain (e.g., accepting bribes) can be regarded as: • Question 27 2 out of 2 points Which of the following refers to the anxiety or discomfort we experience when we deviate from our own internal standards of right and wrong? • Question 28 2 out of 2 points Which of the following explanations of morality argues that actions are right/wrong, good/bad because they are approved or disapproved of by God (or some other higher power)? • Question 29 2 out of 2 points A law enforcement officer accepting money or other favors for overlooking traffic violations would be classified as which of the following forms of corruption? • Question 30 2 out of 2 points Direct misconduct by a police officer, such as extorting money from drug dealers, would be an example of which of the following forms of misconduct? 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