This student has been playing the violin for (about) 8 years and the student's favorite sport is soccer.
Who is Sheel?
This term means that the truth of certain statements depends on the subject.
What is subjective relativism?
This is a name for a sentence (or set of sentences) that provide support for the conclusion.
What is a premise (or What are premises)?
This is the disease that the Tuskegee study focused on.
What is syphilis?
This declaration is the World Medical Association’s best-known policy statement. It has also undergone many revisions, the first of which was in 1964.
What is the Declaration of Helsinki?
This student celebrated a birthday in January. In fact, her birthday was the first day after our first synchronous meeting.
Who is Veda?
This term means that some moral statements are true independent of one’s mind.
What is moral objectivism?
An argument where if the premises are true, then the conclusion must be true as well has this property.
What is validity?
This is the social worker and epidemiologist who tirelessly worked to bring the study to an end.
Who is Peter Buxton?
An RCT in which a placebo is tested against a new drug.
What is a PCT? (or, What is a Placebo-controlled trial?)
This student used to swim but now does volleyball. Additionally, she used to play the clarinet.
Who is Mira?
This statement means that moral statements are true without any exceptions.
What is moral absolutism?
Another name for an argument that has only true premises and is valid.
What is soundness?
This physician and former director of the Public Health Service’s division of venereal disease advised that the Rosenwald fund set up a syphilis control program for Blacks in the South.
Who is Taliaferro Clark?
This is the first condition that the Nuremberg code requires that research participants give for any experiment involving humans as subjects.
What is informed consent?
This student's name in Greek means wisdom and her first philosophical thought was how people were particularly tiny compared to big things (e.g., universes).
Who is Sophie?
A marriage practice that Eskimos believed in.
What is polygamy?
This is a valid argument that has the following form:
1. If P then Q.
2. P
3. Therefore, Q.
What is Modus Ponens?
This is the year that the Tuskegee Syphilis Study officially began.
What is 1932?
This is the name of a principle that requires that members of a control group be given whatever is the current standard of care for the condition being studied.
What is the principle of standard care?
This student resides in the same state as Mr. Barclay.
Who is Ella?
A practice that the Callatians followed when one of their ancestors died.
What is eating their dead?
In the lecture video on Principles of Logical Reasoning, this is the name of the argument in which Priyanka Chopra was discussed.
What is an invalid argument with true premises?
This is the reporter of the Washington Star who broke the news of the study, which led to public outcry and ultimately an end to the study.
Who is Jean Heller?
According to the Belmont Report, these three fundamental ethical principles must be respected when research involving human participants is conducted.
What are (i) Respect for persons; (ii) beneficence; and (iii) justice?