The Basics of Morality
Utilitarianism
Proportionalism
JPII’s Action-Based Ethics
Virtue Ethics
100

Name the three components of morality according to Catholicism.

What are the Objective Act, the Subjective Goal (Intentions), and the Context or Circumstances?

100

This secular ethical framework assesses actions by calculating the aggregate effects on overall welfare or happiness.

What is Utilitarianism?

100

Proportionalism, though rooted in Catholic ethics, departs from deontological ethics by considering this element as the most important.

what is the Intention or circumstances of the act?

100

John Paul II’s ethical framework is associated with this broader category of ethics, which assesses actions by adherence to objective moral duties.

What is deontological or duty-based ethics?

100

The term in virtue ethics describes the human purpose or end goall

What is Telos?

200

This part of Catholic morality evaluates the purpose behind the action.

What is the Subjective Goal or Intentions?

200

This founder of Utilitarianism denied intrinsic human worth, calling human rights “nonsense on stilts” in favor of measurable outcomes.

Who is Jeremy Bentham?

200
This is the branch of ethics that both proportionalism and utilitarianism fall under.

What is consequentialism?

200

True or False: JPII believed that some acts are intrinsically disordered and cannot be justified by intentions or outcomes.

What is true?

200

True or False: Virtue Ethics emphasizes that actions shape the character of the person performing them.

What is True?

300

This component considers the situation in which an action takes place and any influencing factors.

What are the Context or Circumstances?

300

These are two consequences of Utilitarianism

What is there are no moral absolutes and that Humans do not have intrinsic dignity and worth. 

300

According to Proportionalism, an action may be justified if it produces a greater proportion of these relative to disvalues.

What are positive values or goods?

300

According to JPII, the moral permissibility of an action is grounded in this aspect, which he considered immutable.

What is the objective act or intrinsic moral status?

300

This is what shapes the moral character of the agent and cultivates virtue or vice in the agent.

What are the actions of the individual?

400

 In Catholic ethics, this component is prioritized in JPII’s Action-Based Ethics.

What is the Objective Act?

400

In Utilitarianism, moral judgments are rooted in this concept, measuring an action’s ethical worth by its collective benefit or harm.

What is net utility?

400

Proportionalism holds that most actions are not intrinsically moral or immoral but fall into this preliminary category, subject to further ethical evaluation.

What is pre-moral or morally neutral?

400

This principle, central to JPII’s ethics, insists on the inherent worth and sanctity of each individual, rejecting any utilitarian valuation of persons.

What is the intrinsic dignity of the person or the inalienable sanctity of life?

400

Virtue Ethics is complementary to JPII’s ethics and stresses the development of these patterns of behavior.

What are virtuous habits?

500

True or False: All ethical frameworks consider circumstances as important in determining morality.

What is False?

500

Utilitarian analysis often employs this approach, systematically weighing potential benefits against costs to reach the most ethical conclusion.

What is a cost-benefit analysis or consequentialist calculus?

500

Proportionalism posits that ethical actions are often chosen based on this principle, the mitigation of the greater harm or promotion of the lesser evil.

What is the lesser of two evils?

500

According to Pope John Paul II, what forms the ‘universal norm of morality’?

What is The Holy Trinity and Natural Law

500

This is the best state in the union.

What is NEW JERSEY?

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