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ACCOUNTABILITY & RESPONSIBILITY

ACCOUNTABILITY & RESPONSIBILITY
15問 • 2年前
  • Honey Joy T. Dallego
  • 通報

    問題一覧

  • 1

    is a natural product of our rationality, which consists of our reason (or intelligence) and free will (or freedom)

    Accountability

  • 2

    deservingness of blame or praise for the actions that we perform

    Accountability

  • 3

    being responsible for something simply means being the cause of that something

    Responsibility

  • 4

    is duty or obligation, or having certain duties or obligations towards other people

    RESPONSIBILITY

  • 5

    refers to responsibility understood as the possession of duties as prospective responsibility, the kind of responsibility that directed towards what will or may happen, in contrast, he refers to the responsibility understood as accountability as retrospective responsibility, the kind of responsibility directed towards what had happened already

    MICHAEL ZIMMERMAN

  • 6

    a person is only accountable for actions in which he/she is the cause

    AGENCY/CAUSATION

  • 7

    referring to the condition in which a person knows or has the capacity to know the moral quality (moral goodness or badness) of his/her action

    KNOWLEDGE CONDITION

  • 8

    referring to the condition in which a person intends or freely chooses to perform an action he/she is doing

    INTENTIONALITY CONDITION

  • 9

    refers to the kind of ignorance where the ignorant person cannot be said to have known better. This kind is the excusing type of ignorance

    BLAMELESS IGNORANCE

  • 10

    refers to kind of ignorance where the ignorant person can be said to have known and it is his/her duty to know it. This kind is not an excusing kind of ignorance

    BLAMEFUL IGNORANCE

  • 11

    some of the circumstances surrounding the actions we have knowingly and intentionally performed affect the degree of our moral accountability for these actions

    DEGREE CONDITIONS

  • 12

    the more knowledgeable a person is, the greater his/her moral accountability. The less knowledgeable a person is, the lesser is his/her moral accountability

    DEGREE OF KNOWLEDGE

  • 13

    this is the pressure or difficulty in life that forces one to perform a wrongdoing. There are moments where we feel forced to do certain actions we know to be morally wrong. Because we know such actions to be morally wrong and choose to perform them anyway, we are then morally accountable for these actions

    DEGREE OF PRESSURE

  • 14

    this is the seriousness of the injury caused by the wrong doing. The greater the intensity of the injury, the greater the moral accountability. The lesser the intensity of the injury, the lesser the moral accountability

    DEGREE OF INTENSITY

  • 15

    this is the participation in a group or collective act of moral wrongdoing. The greater the involvement, the greater the moral accountability. The lesser the involvement, the lesser the moral accountability

    DEGREE OF INVOLVEMENT

  • WORLD BANK AND IMF (FROM WEB)

    WORLD BANK AND IMF (FROM WEB)

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 21問 · 2年前

    WORLD BANK AND IMF (FROM WEB)

    WORLD BANK AND IMF (FROM WEB)

    21問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    MONEY SUPPLY CREATION

    MONEY SUPPLY CREATION

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 32問 · 2年前

    MONEY SUPPLY CREATION

    MONEY SUPPLY CREATION

    32問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    WORLD BANK AND IMF (FROM WEB)

    WORLD BANK AND IMF (FROM WEB)

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 21問 · 2年前

    WORLD BANK AND IMF (FROM WEB)

    WORLD BANK AND IMF (FROM WEB)

    21問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    INTRO TO ETHICS

    INTRO TO ETHICS

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 28問 · 2年前

    INTRO TO ETHICS

    INTRO TO ETHICS

    28問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    CLASSIFICATION OF ETHICAL ETHICS

    CLASSIFICATION OF ETHICAL ETHICS

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 15問 · 2年前

    CLASSIFICATION OF ETHICAL ETHICS

    CLASSIFICATION OF ETHICAL ETHICS

    15問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    NATURE OF MOTAL STATEMENTS

    NATURE OF MOTAL STATEMENTS

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 5問 · 2年前

    NATURE OF MOTAL STATEMENTS

    NATURE OF MOTAL STATEMENTS

    5問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    UTILITARIANISM

    UTILITARIANISM

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 22問 · 2年前

    UTILITARIANISM

    UTILITARIANISM

    22問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    VIRTUE ETHICS

    VIRTUE ETHICS

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 9問 · 2年前

    VIRTUE ETHICS

    VIRTUE ETHICS

    9問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    7 STEPS MORAL REASONING

    7 STEPS MORAL REASONING

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 8問 · 2年前

    7 STEPS MORAL REASONING

    7 STEPS MORAL REASONING

    8問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    Lesson Engagement & Exploration

    Lesson Engagement & Exploration

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 25問 · 2年前

    Lesson Engagement & Exploration

    Lesson Engagement & Exploration

    25問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    Water Supply

    Water Supply

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 13問 · 2年前

    Water Supply

    Water Supply

    13問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    The Building Water Supply System

    The Building Water Supply System

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 13問 · 2年前

    The Building Water Supply System

    The Building Water Supply System

    13問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    General Water Distribution

    General Water Distribution

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 32問 · 2年前

    General Water Distribution

    General Water Distribution

    32問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    SOCSCI 12

    SOCSCI 12

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 72問 · 2年前

    SOCSCI 12

    SOCSCI 12

    72問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    AGRI ECON

    AGRI ECON

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 41問 · 2年前

    AGRI ECON

    AGRI ECON

    41問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    LABOR ECON (LECTURE 1)

    LABOR ECON (LECTURE 1)

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 50問 · 2年前

    LABOR ECON (LECTURE 1)

    LABOR ECON (LECTURE 1)

    50問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    OBLICON( Art. 1156-1160)

    OBLICON( Art. 1156-1160)

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 31問 · 2年前

    OBLICON( Art. 1156-1160)

    OBLICON( Art. 1156-1160)

    31問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    CHAPTER 2

    CHAPTER 2

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 26問 · 2年前

    CHAPTER 2

    CHAPTER 2

    26問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    2.2

    2.2

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 18問 · 2年前

    2.2

    2.2

    18問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    AGRI ECON CHAPTER 6

    AGRI ECON CHAPTER 6

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 19問 · 2年前

    AGRI ECON CHAPTER 6

    AGRI ECON CHAPTER 6

    19問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    LABOR MARKET

    LABOR MARKET

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 31問 · 2年前

    LABOR MARKET

    LABOR MARKET

    31問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    KITPOGI

    KITPOGI

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 14問 · 2年前

    KITPOGI

    KITPOGI

    14問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    2.3

    2.3

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 38問 · 2年前

    2.3

    2.3

    38問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    PI01-CHAPTER 1

    PI01-CHAPTER 1

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 14問 · 2年前

    PI01-CHAPTER 1

    PI01-CHAPTER 1

    14問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    RIZAL LAW

    RIZAL LAW

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 30問 · 2年前

    RIZAL LAW

    RIZAL LAW

    30問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    Research 01

    Research 01

    Honey Joy T. Dallego · 22問 · 2年前

    Research 01

    Research 01

    22問 • 2年前
    Honey Joy T. Dallego

    問題一覧

  • 1

    is a natural product of our rationality, which consists of our reason (or intelligence) and free will (or freedom)

    Accountability

  • 2

    deservingness of blame or praise for the actions that we perform

    Accountability

  • 3

    being responsible for something simply means being the cause of that something

    Responsibility

  • 4

    is duty or obligation, or having certain duties or obligations towards other people

    RESPONSIBILITY

  • 5

    refers to responsibility understood as the possession of duties as prospective responsibility, the kind of responsibility that directed towards what will or may happen, in contrast, he refers to the responsibility understood as accountability as retrospective responsibility, the kind of responsibility directed towards what had happened already

    MICHAEL ZIMMERMAN

  • 6

    a person is only accountable for actions in which he/she is the cause

    AGENCY/CAUSATION

  • 7

    referring to the condition in which a person knows or has the capacity to know the moral quality (moral goodness or badness) of his/her action

    KNOWLEDGE CONDITION

  • 8

    referring to the condition in which a person intends or freely chooses to perform an action he/she is doing

    INTENTIONALITY CONDITION

  • 9

    refers to the kind of ignorance where the ignorant person cannot be said to have known better. This kind is the excusing type of ignorance

    BLAMELESS IGNORANCE

  • 10

    refers to kind of ignorance where the ignorant person can be said to have known and it is his/her duty to know it. This kind is not an excusing kind of ignorance

    BLAMEFUL IGNORANCE

  • 11

    some of the circumstances surrounding the actions we have knowingly and intentionally performed affect the degree of our moral accountability for these actions

    DEGREE CONDITIONS

  • 12

    the more knowledgeable a person is, the greater his/her moral accountability. The less knowledgeable a person is, the lesser is his/her moral accountability

    DEGREE OF KNOWLEDGE

  • 13

    this is the pressure or difficulty in life that forces one to perform a wrongdoing. There are moments where we feel forced to do certain actions we know to be morally wrong. Because we know such actions to be morally wrong and choose to perform them anyway, we are then morally accountable for these actions

    DEGREE OF PRESSURE

  • 14

    this is the seriousness of the injury caused by the wrong doing. The greater the intensity of the injury, the greater the moral accountability. The lesser the intensity of the injury, the lesser the moral accountability

    DEGREE OF INTENSITY

  • 15

    this is the participation in a group or collective act of moral wrongdoing. The greater the involvement, the greater the moral accountability. The lesser the involvement, the lesser the moral accountability

    DEGREE OF INVOLVEMENT