For question 6 answer is c
For question 7 answer is b
Answer:
Review what plagiarism is and isn't, providing students with strong examples. Teach your students about paraphrasing and how to cite sources. Advocate for a school-wide Honor Code, which clearly states the consequences for cheating and plagiarizing offenses.
Explanation:
Answer:
E. Laws were clearly broken
Explanation:
The cases of Enron and Madoff goes beyond ethics, because both of them are fully aware of their unethical behavior.
As for Madoff, he knowingly accept large sum of money from his unsuspecting investors, with the knowledge that he is not going to use their money for any legitimate investment, rather than a ponzi scheme which is considered as illegal. Bernie Madoff, was only conducting illegal business knowingly, by defrauding his clients for about $65 billion. He later pleaded guilty to 11 charges, some of which are:
Securities fraud, mail fraud, wire fraud, money laundering, theft from an employee benefit plan etc.
As for Enron, the company was also unethically practicing accounting fraud to cover for their illegal ways of feeding off from their unsuspecting stakeholders who had invested a huge amount of money of about $74 billions into the scheme.
Answer:
a) id
Explanation:
According to the psychoanalytic theory, our personality is made of 3 different structures:
- The id is the part of our personality we are born with. It focuses in instant gratification and is driven by impulses and in-the-moment-needs.
- The superego is the part of our personality that corresponds to our "conscience", it is the internalization of social norms and tells us what's wrong.
- The ego is the mediator between these two structures, is in charge of taking decisions and satisfy either the id or the superego.
Therefore, we can see that the part of the personality that strives for immediate gratification of basic drives is the Id.
This condition is the cortical visual impairment. It is the leading reason of visual impairment in the west. It is due to a wide range of brain damage that affected the part for sense of vision. Such illness is characterized by unique visual responses to images.