Chapter 24

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Across
  1. 2. justified and claims that an individual can make on individuals, groups, society; divided into legal rights and moral rights.
  2. 4. relationship that exists when to mutually dependent groups in a society recognize certain expectations of each other and conduct their affairs accordingly.
  3. 5. belief that actions themselves rather than consequences, determine the worth of actions.
  4. 7. use of normal principles as a basis for defending a chosen path of action in resolving an ethical dilemma.
  5. 14. ideals and customs of a society towards which the members of a group have an affective regard; a value may be a quality desirable as an end it self.
  6. 18. belief that health-related information about individual patients should not be revealed to others; maintenance of privacy.
  7. 19. statements of right conduct governing individual actions.
  8. 20. generally accepted customs, principles, or habits of right living and conduct in a society and the individual's practice in relation to these.
  9. 23. rights rights of individuals or groups that are established and guaranteed by law.
  10. 26. rights of individuals or groups that exist separately from governmental or institutional guarantees.
  11. 28. obligations placed on individuals, groups, and institutions by reason of the so-called moral bond of our independence with others.
  12. 29. ethical reflections that emphasize an intimate personal relationship value system that includes such virtues as sympathy, compassion, fidelity, discernment, and love.
  13. 30. regulations established by government and applicable to people within certain political subdivision.
  14. 32. ethical theory that emphasizes the agents who perform actins and make choices; character and virtue form the framework of this ethical theory.
  15. 33. duty to tell the truth and avoid deception.
  16. 34. strict observance of promises or duties; loyalty and faithfulness to others.
  17. 35. belief system based on a set of moral principles that are embedded in a common morality.
  18. 36. ethical principle that places high value on avoiding harm to others.
  19. 37. situations requiring moral judgement between two or more equally problem-fraught alternatives; two or more competing normal norms are present, creating a challenge about what to do.
Down
  1. 1. gross violation of commonly held standards of decency or human rights.
  2. 3. general, universal guides to action that are derived from so-called moral truths that should be respected unless a morally compelling reason exists not to do so.
  3. 6. articulated statements of role morality as seen by the members of a profession.
  4. 8. person's self-reliance, independence, liberty, rights, privacy, individual choice, freedom of the will, and self-contained ability to decide.
  5. 9. manners and attitudes generally accepted by members of a profession.
  6. 10. internal controls of a profession based on human values or moral principles.
  7. 11. pratice behaviors that are defined by members of a profession.
  8. 12. doing of good; active promotion of goodness, kindness, and charity.
  9. 13. belief that individual rights provide the vital protection of life, liberty, expression, and property.
  10. 15. bodies of systemically related moral principles used to resolve ethical dilemmas.
  11. 16. traits of character that are socially valued, such as courage.
  12. 17. basis for rights-based ethical theory; each individual is protected and allowed to pursue personal projects.
  13. 21. ARRT's mandatory standards of minimally acceptable professional conduct.
  14. 22. standards set by individuals or groups of individuals.
  15. 24. collection or set of group values that an individual or group has as each person's personal guide.
  16. 25. care for; an emotional commitment to and a willingness to act on behalf of a person with whom a caring relationship exists.
  17. 27. publicly displayed ethical conduct of a profession, usually embedded in a code of ethics.
  18. 31. systematic study of rightness and wrongness of human conduct and character as known by natural reason.