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Chapter 02
Business Ethics
1. Ethical conversation is primarily about finding the one and only right thing to do.
True False
2. Business ethics is the application of ethics to the special problems and opportunities experienced
by business people.
True False
3. The social responsibility of business consists only of the expectations employees have of
employers.
True False
4. Insurer American International Group (AIG) is well known in the insurance industry for its ethical
and cautious investments protecting investors.
True False
5. In some countries, businesses must pay bribes in order to receive legitimate supplies.
True False
2-1
Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of
McGraw-Hill Education.
True False
True False
8. The community in which a firm operates would not be considered a stakeholder of the firm.
True False
True False
10. Consequentialism provides a rigid set of rules to follow regardless of the situation.
True False
True False
12. Ethics is not an issue in accounting because of the primarily objective data involved in that field.
True False
2-2
Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of
McGraw-Hill Education.
13. Which of the following was the result in regard to the statute of limitations in the Case Opener in
which the plaintiff claimed that the drug Accutane caused her to develop ulcerative colitis and
irritable bowel syndrome?
A. That because the plaintiff was not warned by her doctor of specific risks caused by the
medication, the statute of limitations did not begin to run until she became aware of an
advertisement discussing the risk.
B. That because the plaintiff was warned by her doctor of specific risks caused by the medication,
the statute of limitations began to run prior to the time she became aware of an advertisement
discussing the risk; and the statute of limitations barred her claim.
C. That the statute of limitations began to run on the plaintiff's claim when the risk of the drug was
discovered by the manufacturer, not on the date on which the plaintiff became aware of the risk
and that the statute of limitations, therefore, barred her claim.
D. That in lawsuits involving this type of drug, there is no statute of limitations because each day
the plaintiff suffers from pain results in the beginning of a new cause of action.
E. That the defendant committed fraud preventing it from relying on the statute of limitations.
14. Which of the following presents a problem when considering the theory of ethics known as
absolutism?
A. The questionable nature of the rules in most absolutist repositories seems overly flexible when
applied to different situations.
B. The unquestionable nature of the rules in most absolutist repositories seems overly inflexible
when applied to different situations.
C. The lack of objectivity.
D. The fact that most individuals associated with this theory have been proven to have acted to the
detriment of their followers in one way or another.
E. The allegation that an excessive number of followers actually follow consequentialism.
2-3
Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of
McGraw-Hill Education.
Another random document with
no related content on Scribd:
The Project Gutenberg eBook of The source of
Language: English
WITH
A NOTE ON THE RELIGION, CUSTOMS, ETC.
OF ABYSSINIA
BY
AND
A N E N TO M O L O G I C A L A P P E N D I X
BY
LONDON
SMITH, ELDER & CO., 15, WATERLOO PLACE
1905
(All rights reserved)
PRINTED BY
WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
LONDON AND BECCLES.
P R E FA C E
TO FACE
PAGE
The Source of the Blue Nile, showing Lake in the Distance Frontispiece
The Start ahead of the Caravan 4
Children at No. 6 Station, between Halfa and Abou Hamed,
eat the Remains of Lunch, Curry and Rice 4
The Welcome at Abou Harras 13
Village Musicians at Abou Harras 14
The Wells at the Foot of Gebal Arang 18
Mr. Flemming’s House at Gedaref 22
Rest-house between Goz Regeb and Adarama 22
Gum-bearing Mimosa Trees 30
Trying the Temperature of a Patient at the Doctor’s
Parade 30
Rain Country 64
The Knotted Sapling now become a Tree 66
Messenger sent to stop us going down to the Lake 68
Houses at Delgi 79
Washing out “Tedj” Pots at Delgi 79
A Case of Leprosy 104
Fording the River Gumara 106
Interested in the Photographic Camera 110
Women dancing at the Feast of the Epiphany 110
The “Candelabra Euphorbia” on the Edge of a Dry Water-
course 114
Between Sara and Korata 114
The Church at Korata containing the Frescoes 118
The Portuguese Bridge over the Blue Nile 118
Frescoes in the Church at Korata 120
Our Guide between Korata and Woreb 132
The Donkeys crossing the Ferry 140
The Mules swimming the Ferry 140
Pushing the Donkeys into the Water, preparatory to their
being ferried across 142
Interior of the Church at Bahardar Georgis 154
Market-day at Zegi 162
Interviewing the Sultan of Delgi 170
The Sultan of Delgi, an Old Priest, and Slave carrying the
Shield 170
Head of a Haartebeest 184
“Lates Niloticus” caught with a Trout-rod 184
Hadendowa, Camel-driver 186
Dinka Boy, Camel-driver 186
Soudanese with Amulets 190
At the Well, Goratia 190
Kassala Hill and Market-place 204
The Moudirieh at Kassala 206
Tents pitched in the Enclosure of the Moudirieh at
Kassala 206
Goz Regeb Granite Stone, Mimosa Scrub in the Distance 208
Goz Regeb Stones 208
Rocks at Goz Regeb 210
Rocks at Goz Regeb Hill 210
A Mirage, showing Goz Regeb Hill in the Distance 212
Lord Kitchener’s Bridge over the Atbara, near Berber 214
MAPS
At end of
The Anglo-Egyptian Soudan
Volume
Lake Tsana „
THE
SOURCE OF THE BLUE NILE
CHAPTER I