Provide a critical assessment of the following comparative general claim:You'd be better off if you got more sleep.
What will be an ideal response?
Unclear terms of comparison: better off than what? Also, the comparison itself is obscure: in what way better off-looks, health, attitude, or something else? The terms of the second comparison are clearer, but it's still pretty unclear how much additional sleep counts as more.
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John Stuart Mill changed Bentham's principle of utility to allow for qualitative differences in pleasures in order to make utilitarianism more consistent with our sense of fairness and justice
Indicate whether the statement is true or false
"A right and proper order to be followed in any circumstance" is a description of the Confucian virtue __________
a. cheng-ming b. li c. ren d. shu e. xiao
Jacob Arminius accepted a version of the doctrine of predestination: God's predestination of certain people to be saved depends upon
A) God's pure election of those people from all eternity B) God's knowing all things, and thus knowing who will believe C) which people Jesus has chosen to die for D) those people having lived in the right place and time in history
According to Holley’s theory, for a sale to be ethical, which of the following
conditions must obtain?
a. Both buyer and seller understand what they are giving up and what they are receiving in return. b. Neither buyer nor seller is compelled to enter into the exchange as a result of coercion. c. Both buyer and seller are able at the time of the exchange to make rational judgments about costs and benefits. d. All of the above