A) A state that provides comprehensive social welfare B) A global government C) A completely stateless society D) A state limited to protecting against force, fraud, and enforcing contracts
A) Identical to an anarchist society B) Unjustified and should be abolished C) Justified and the most extensive state that can be justified D) A necessary evil
A) Patterned and end-state principles of distributive justice B) The existence of the minimal state C) The concept of self-ownership D) The legitimacy of private property
A) Justice in contribution, reward, and punishment B) Justice in acquisition, transfer, and rectification C) Justice in lawmaking, enforcement, and adjudication D) Justice in distribution, equality, and need
A) Redistributing wealth to achieve equality B) Correcting injustices in past acquisitions and transfers C) Establishing fair procedures for the future D) Punishing criminals for their offenses
A) John Rawls B) John Locke C) Immanuel Kant D) Karl Marx
A) The right to vote B) The right to welfare C) The right to self-ownership D) The right to equality
A) Egalitarian principles B) Patterned principles C) Utilitarian principles D) Libertarian principles
A) Forced labor B) A necessary public good C) A form of charity D) A voluntary social contract
A) A global anarchist federation B) A state that protects only those who pay for its services C) A state that provides universal healthcare D) A state with no functions at all
A) Socialism B) Libertarianism C) Utilitarianism D) Communitarianism
A) How much wealth a person should hold B) The fair distribution of corporate shares C) The legal rules for owning property D) Whether a person's possessions are legitimately owned
A) Patterns of distribution enhance liberty B) Government patterns are necessary for liberty C) Liberty is itself a patterned concept D) Free exchange will disrupt any pre-set distribution pattern
A) The idea that all men are created equal B) The condition that property acquisition must leave 'enough and as good' for others C) The right to rebel against a tyrannical government D) The labor theory of property acquisition
A) The intentions of the distributor B) The current pattern of distribution C) How the distribution came about D) The future consequences of distribution
A) A single, mandatory way of life for all B) A detailed blueprint for a perfect society C) A global communist state D) A minimal state where people can form voluntary communities
A) From a deliberate constitutional convention B) Through evolutionary necessity C) As a result of class conflict D) Spontaneously from individual actions, not by design
A) The communitarian theory B) The entitlement theory C) The difference principle D) The utility principle
A) The prisoner's dilemma B) The Wilt Chamberlain argument C) The veil of ignorance D) The trolley problem
A) Evolves from a state of nature war B) Arises without violating anyone's rights C) Is created by a social contract D) Is imposed by a powerful ruler
A) Continuous interference with liberty B) The abolition of money C) A single world government D) Voluntary cooperation only
A) Socialist B) Libertarian C) Communitarian D) Conservative |