[Thanks, Elizabeth! Addendum: in ch.16, who says we're ethically obligated to deploy technology in order to produce "better children"? In ch.17, who says "the Singularity is near"?]
Quiz Questions
1. Concern for individual
autonomy and personal sovereignty can obscure what other issue?
3. What popular sentiment on human reproductive cloning did Planned Parenthood not adopt, "fortunately"?
5. Name two of the distinctive concerns of the "new biopolitics" marking its difference from mainstream bioethics.
7. Who was the Social Darwinists' leading spokesperson, and what did conservatives oppose in his name?
9. Who said "low intelligence is a stronger precursor of poverty than low socioeconomic background"?
==
3. What popular sentiment on human reproductive cloning did Planned Parenthood not adopt, "fortunately"?
5. Name two of the distinctive concerns of the "new biopolitics" marking its difference from mainstream bioethics.
7. Who was the Social Darwinists' leading spokesperson, and what did conservatives oppose in his name?
9. Who said "low intelligence is a stronger precursor of poverty than low socioeconomic background"?
==
1. What kind of "motherhood" did
Indiana officially promote in the '20s and '30s?
3. What dismaying transfer of power did Ada Schweitzer inadvertently facilitate?
3. What dismaying transfer of power did Ada Schweitzer inadvertently facilitate?
5. What did Schweitzer
call the Better Baby Contest at the fair?
7. What role was played by corporate philanthropies and academics in the promotion of eugenics?
9. What was Hitler's "bible"?
==
7. What role was played by corporate philanthropies and academics in the promotion of eugenics?
9. What was Hitler's "bible"?
==
1. German lawyers meeting in Berlin in 1934 debated bringing what from the
statutes of thirty U.S. states to the Third Reich?
3. What is the real problem of disability?
5. Galton's work led directly to what?
7. "The Galton Institute" was originally called what?
9. What did Robert Edwards say he learned from the development of IVF?
==
3. What is the real problem of disability?
5. Galton's work led directly to what?
7. "The Galton Institute" was originally called what?
9. What did Robert Edwards say he learned from the development of IVF?
==
1. The advent of what common metric made it possible to calculate the efficacy
of selling?
3. What was the final impetus for government intervention in research ethics?
5. Feminist theory is an attempt to do what?
7. When is society more willing to intrude on human autonomy?
9. What expectation for disability rights debates is "sadly" unmet?
==
3. What was the final impetus for government intervention in research ethics?
5. Feminist theory is an attempt to do what?
7. When is society more willing to intrude on human autonomy?
9. What expectation for disability rights debates is "sadly" unmet?
==
1. What does Catherine Myser mean by "whiteness"?
3. Decentering whiteness would enable bioethics to do what?
5. Bioethicists are fixated on what, with what implication for the demographics of the field's concerns and utility?
7. Why did the Nashvillian participate in Eli Lilly's drug tests?
9. What did Glenn McGee predict in 2003?
11. Who "invented" Bob Dole?
3. Decentering whiteness would enable bioethics to do what?
5. Bioethicists are fixated on what, with what implication for the demographics of the field's concerns and utility?
7. Why did the Nashvillian participate in Eli Lilly's drug tests?
9. What did Glenn McGee predict in 2003?
11. Who "invented" Bob Dole?
==
1. What do Athanasiou and Darnovsky fear we're at risk of losing, if the human
genome is privatized?
3. What published opinion do our authors cite as committing a "naturalistic fallacy"?
5. What practice continued into the 70s in "that liberal paragon Sweden"?
7. What's the logical conclusion of the "Kinsley-Sullivan thesis" and what does it conflate?
9. What's needed most, to reduce the incidence of monogenic disease?
3. What published opinion do our authors cite as committing a "naturalistic fallacy"?
5. What practice continued into the 70s in "that liberal paragon Sweden"?
7. What's the logical conclusion of the "Kinsley-Sullivan thesis" and what does it conflate?
9. What's needed most, to reduce the incidence of monogenic disease?
==
1. What
are the two major spheres of justice discussed by Campbell?
3. Another
name for the micro-allocation of health care, concerned with prioritizing
access to given treatments, is what? (HINT: This was hotly debated and widely
misrepresented ("death panels" etc.) in the early months of the Obama
administration.)
5. What is
the inverse care law?
7. How are
Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) supposed to address and solve the problem
of who should receive (for instance) a transplant?
9. Under
what accounts of health might we describe a sick or dying person as healthy?
==
1.Name one of the basic
requirements agreed upon by all codes devised to protect individuals from
malicious research.
3. Name one of four areas of research discussed in the book.
5. Name one of four R's used in international legislation pertaining to animal rights in research?
7. What did Hwang Woo-suk do?
9. What categories of human enhancement does Campbell enumerate, and what does he identify as its "extreme end"?
==
3. Name one of four areas of research discussed in the book.
5. Name one of four R's used in international legislation pertaining to animal rights in research?
7. What did Hwang Woo-suk do?
9. What categories of human enhancement does Campbell enumerate, and what does he identify as its "extreme end"?
==
1. (T/F) Dignity,
respect, and confidentiality are among the aspects of the clinical relationship
which emphasize the importance of trust.
3. The idea that the
doctor always knows best is called what?
5. What general
principle allows breach of confidentiality?
7. Why have organizations like the WHO opposed any form of organ trading?
9. What does palliative medicine help recover?
7. Why have organizations like the WHO opposed any form of organ trading?
9. What does palliative medicine help recover?
==
1. Chapter 3 begins by asking if our bioethical perspective
("vision") is skewed by _____... (a) cultural assumptions, (b) gender
bias, (c) religious faith, (d) all of the above
3. (T/F) The "feminist critique" says bioethics has been dominated by culturally masculine thinking.
5. What's a furor therapeutics?
7. What's allegedly distinctive about "Asian bioethics"?
9. What gives Buddhists and Hindus a "whole new perspective" on bioethical issues?
3. (T/F) The "feminist critique" says bioethics has been dominated by culturally masculine thinking.
5. What's a furor therapeutics?
7. What's allegedly distinctive about "Asian bioethics"?
9. What gives Buddhists and Hindus a "whole new perspective" on bioethical issues?
==
1. (T/F) In Anna's story, why did she wish not
to be resuscitated?
3. In deontological theory, what is the difference between hypothetical and categorical imperatives?
5. What would Kant say about Tuskegee, or about the murderer "at our door"?
7. What is the distinctive question in virtue ethics?
9. What is the Harm Principle, and who was its author?
3. In deontological theory, what is the difference between hypothetical and categorical imperatives?
5. What would Kant say about Tuskegee, or about the murderer "at our door"?
7. What is the distinctive question in virtue ethics?
9. What is the Harm Principle, and who was its author?
==
1. Name two of the ways you
can earn a base in our class. (See "course requirements" & other
info in the sidebar & on the syllabus)
3. How do you earn your first base in each class?
5. How can you earn bases on days when you're not present?
7. Suppose you came to class one day, turned on the computer/projector and opened the CoPhi site, had 3 correct answers on the daily quiz, and had posted a comment, a discussion question, and an alternate quiz question before class. How many runs would you claim in your personal log and on the scorecard that day?
9. What are Dr. Oliver's office hours? Where is his office? What is his email address?
3. How do you earn your first base in each class?
5. How can you earn bases on days when you're not present?
7. Suppose you came to class one day, turned on the computer/projector and opened the CoPhi site, had 3 correct answers on the daily quiz, and had posted a comment, a discussion question, and an alternate quiz question before class. How many runs would you claim in your personal log and on the scorecard that day?
9. What are Dr. Oliver's office hours? Where is his office? What is his email address?
==
1.(T/F) Campbell's examples of bioethical
questions include whether health care professionals must meet higher standards
than businesspeople, the ethics of longevity via pharmacology, designer babies,
human/animal hybrids, state paternalism, euthanasia, and environmental ethics.
3. The _________ required that 'The health of my patient must be my first consideration.' (Hippocratic Oath, Geneva Code, British Medical Association, International Association of Bioethics)
5. What did Ivan Ilich warn about in Medical Nemesis?
7. Bioethics has broken free of what mentality?
3. The _________ required that 'The health of my patient must be my first consideration.' (Hippocratic Oath, Geneva Code, British Medical Association, International Association of Bioethics)
5. What did Ivan Ilich warn about in Medical Nemesis?
7. Bioethics has broken free of what mentality?
9. Do descriptive
claims settle evaluative issues?
Report Quizzes
1. Name
two of the communities of deaf people.
3. What are the limitations of a deaf patient lip reading in the ER?
5. What percent of the US population identifies as deaf or hard of hearing?
7. What is a potential effect of hearing loss on a person's life?
9. The average hard of hearing person understands ____% of spoken word.
3. What are the limitations of a deaf patient lip reading in the ER?
5. What percent of the US population identifies as deaf or hard of hearing?
7. What is a potential effect of hearing loss on a person's life?
9. The average hard of hearing person understands ____% of spoken word.
==
1. What did study did
Professor Jenson base his research and findings on?
3. What year did his Harvard Educational Review article come out and what were some major world events happening?
5. What scale ultimately transform into the IQ scale known today?
3. What year did his Harvard Educational Review article come out and what were some major world events happening?
5. What scale ultimately transform into the IQ scale known today?
==
1. An
emergency room is a hospital room or area staffed and equipped for the
reception and treatment of person’s requiring __________ care. (immediate)
3. What
percentage of individuals visited the emergency department in 2015? (43.3%)
5. Name
one reason why people choose to go to the emergency room over other places. (Convenience, family or
friends insisted, Felt hospital offered the best level of care, personal anxiety
made them feel like they had to go)
7. How
many times did “Patient G” visit the hospital in three years? (1000)
9. Name
an alternative to using the emergency room. (Urgent
Care, Primary Care Physician)
Thanks, Elizabeth.
ReplyDeleteThanks for doing this Elizabeth, and for putting the answers of your presentation quiz up! If Emma or Lilly sees this, anyway we could get your answers as well?
ReplyDelete1) The IQ exam he gave to his “diverse group of students”
ReplyDelete3)1969, civil rights movement, Cold War,
5) Stanford-Binet intelligence scale
QQ ch16:
ReplyDelete1) Charles Darwin’s cousin coined what term and from where? (177)
2) What novelist challenged Herman J Muller’s positive view of “eutelegenesis”? (178)
3) Jesse Gelsimger passes as a result of what? (179)
4) The eugenics movement in the early 20th century was “rooted” in what? (181)
5)” Biotech cheerleaders” say individualism does what? (182)
QQ ch. 17:
1) when was SU founded? (187)
2) What does Kurzweils book predict by pg21? (187)
3) SU is an unaccredited, for profit enterprise (T/F)? (191)
4) Raymond McCauley cofounded BioCurious, what was its mission? (193)
5) What does McCauley say Singularitarians discourage? (194)