BE SURE TO WRITE YOUR NAME ON YOUR ANSWER SHEET!! IMPORTANT: MAKE ALL ERASURES COMPLETELY - IT IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY TO CLEARLY INDICATE YOUR CHOSEN ANSWER. RESPONSES THAT ARE NOT COMPLETELY ERASED WILL BE COUNTED AS INCORRECT. THIS EXAM IS WORTH 100 POINTS. Temple College Government 2302 – Civil Liberties and Civil Rights Fall, 1999 Exam #1 MULTIPLE CHOICE. INSTRUCTIONS: Answer each of the following multiple choice questions by marking the letter on your scan-tron form that corresponds to the BEST response. 48 questions/2.08 points each/100 points total. 1. Which of the following does John Winkle see as an important contextual limit on the rights and liberties of the individual? 1. conflicts with order 2. conflicts with equality 3. federalism 4. the projected harm of denying the right (the more substantial the penalty, the more significant the safeguards) 5. conflicts with other rights (i.e., the freedom of the press vis-a-vis the right to a fair and impartial trial) a. 1, 2, and 5 b. 3 and 4 c. 1, 2, 4, and 5 d. 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 2. The idea that the virtue of order was tied to the duties and responsibilities of citizenship is most closely associated with a. the Greek theory of the city-state. b. the Stoic/Christian theory of the universal community. c. the Renaissance/Reformation theory of the nation-state. d. either b or c. 3. Which of the following trends in western political thought was premised on a belief in the inherent sinfulness of mankind? a. the Greek theory of the city-state. b. the Stoic/Christian theory of the universal community. c. the Renaissance/Reformation theory of the nation-state. d. none of the above. 4. Which of the following philosophers represented an effort to merge the Christian tradition with Aristotle's teaching on the naturalness of the political community? a. St. Augustine b. John Calvin c. John Knox d. Thomas Aquinas 5. John Calvin and John Knox represent an important departure in western concepts concerning political obligation because a. they argue that subjects are not obligated to obey an ungodly prince. b. they are the first to argue the idea that society is formed by a contract. c. they are the first to advocate popular rights that cannot be infringed by the government. d. none of these. 6. Which of the assigned authors is best characterized as an anarchist? a. John Stuart Mill. b. Emma Goldman. c. Hanna Pitkin. d. Herbert Croly. 7. Which of the following is consistent with John Rawls' principles of justice? a. fundamental liberties of everyone b. conditions of equal opportunity c. efforts to improve the lot of the least well-off member of society d. all of these 8. In his article “Equality of Opportunity,” Michael Levin argues that equality should be identified with opportunity rather than outcomes because the latter a. would require “drastic curtailment of freedom.” b. “denies the diversity of human talents.” c. ignores the “distinction between an opportunity and what one makes of it.” d. all of the above. 9. The idea that government originates as an implied contract among individuals who agree to obey laws in exchange for protection of their rights is known as the a. social design. b. social contract. c. inherent contract. d. government contract. 10. The non-violent violation of laws that people believe to be unjust is known as a. violent disobedience. b. civil disobedience. c. criminal disobedience. d. civil compliance. 11. The type of activity indicated by question #10 is suggested by the writings of a. Thomas Hobbes and Isaiah Berlin. b. Henry David Thoreau and John Rawls. c. John Stuart Mill and Emma Goldman. d. John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. 12. One objective of the type of activity suggested by question #10 is to a. b. c. d. reveal the corruption within a local police force. Address the support of locally elected officials. Bankrupt an oppressive government. Stir the conscience of an apathetic majority. 13. Thomas Hobbes argued that government derived its power from the a. power of the states. b. Power of the military. c. God. d. Consent of the governed. 14. The pessimistic view of human nature and life without government (in a state of nature) is “nasty, brutish, and short” is most closely associated with a. Jean-Jacques Rousseau. b. John Rawls. c. Thomas Hobbes. d. Thomas Jefferson. 15. The Declaration of Independence expressed the belief that the rights of life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness (property) are not granted by government. Rather, they a. are implied in the U.S. Constitution. b. Are the results of positive (man-made) law. c. Are possessed by the individual by virtue of the laws of nature. d. Are rights given to those who are recognized by the sovereign power as citizens. 16. Which of the following political philosophers had the greatest single influence on the principles expressed in the Declaration of Independence by the founders of the American republic? a. Thomas Hobbes b. Jean-Jacques Rousseau c. Thomas Aquinas d. John Locke. 17. John Locke’s philosophy, which endorsed the moral right of people to dissolve a government that violates their fundamental rights, is known as the theory of a. civil disobedience. b. the nation-state. c. the universal community. d. the social contract. 18. The framers of the U.S. Constitution embraced the principle that a government should itself be restrained by law. This is known as the principle of a. ineffective government. b. Confederal government. c. Popular government d. Limited government. 19. Written or unwritten rules by which government operates, including limits on governmental power is a. A contract. b. A legislative act. c. A constitution. d. Positive law. 20. Most Americans in the early national period believed that the liberties of individuals and restraints on governmental powers should be set forth in a. a declaration of principles. b. Judicial decisions. c. Legislative actions. d. Constitutions. 21. The philosopher who argued that the laws of nature guarantee every person “certain inalienable Rights” was a. Thomas Hobbes. b. John Locke. c. Jean-Jacques Rousseau. d. Adam Smith. 22. Implicit in the theory of the social contract (as understood by the American founders) is the belief that a. governmental processes should be open to public scrutiny. b. There should be strict separation of church and state. c. There should be an elite governing body to guide the uneducated masses. d. Governmental powers and restrictions on the individual should be kept to a minimum. 23. The ability to make of oneself what one can, to develop one’s talents and abilities, and to be rewarded for hard work, initiative, and achievements is characterized by Michael Levin as a. equality of opportunity. b. True political equality. c. Equality of results. d. The “origins of inequality.” 24. The notion that everyone starts and finishes the race together, regardless of ability, talent, initiative, or work effort, is known as a. equality of opportunity. b. True political equality. c. Equality of results. d. The “origins of inequality.” 25. Which American document is identified as the “supreme law of the land”? a. the Declaration of Independence b. the Articles of Confederation c. the Mayflower Compact d. the Constitution 26. Which of the following documents represent an important contribution to the American covenanting tradition? 1. The Magna Carta, 1215 2. 3. 4. 5. a. The Mayflower Compact, 1620 The Fundamental Orders of Connecticut, 1639 The Writ of Habeas Corpus, 1754 The United States Constitution, 1787 1, 2, and 3 b. 2, 3, and 4 c. 2, 3, and 5 d. 1, 2, 3, and 5 27. Only in Connecticut and Rhode Island did the colonists draw up their charters and present them to the king, thereby setting the precedent in the American experience for which of the following principles? a. direct democracy b. the right to petition the government c. republican form of government d. written constitutions 28. In writing the Declaration of Independence (1776), Thomas Jefferson lifted several phrases directly from a. Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England, 1765 b. Hume’s, Of the Original Social Contract, 1752 c. Montesquieu’s, Spirit of the Laws, 1752 d. Locke’s, Second Treatise of Civil Government, 1694 29. Under the Articles of Confederation, the United States was really a a. single, integrated nation. b. commonwealth. c. confederation of nations. d. autonomous group of colonies united in a single goal – independence. 30. One of the major problems of the Articles of Confederation was that Congress had no power to a. tax the people directly. b. send envoys to foreign countries. c. engage in diplomacy. d. requisition materials and revenues from the states. 31. Under the Articles of Confederation, the national government could not protect merchants from heavy tariffs because the national government did not have the power to a. tax exports. b. regulate interstate commerce. c. tax imports. d. a and c. 32. The event that galvanized property owners more than any other to support the creation of a strong central government capable of dealing with democratic “mob rule” was a. the Whiskey Rebellion. b. The Charter Oak Affair. c. The Colonial Indian Uprising. d. Shays’ Rebellion. 33. In 1787, Congress called for a convention to meet in Philadelphia for the “sole purpose” of a. putting down the French and Indian Wars. b. revising the Articles of Confederation. c. rewriting the Mayflower Compact. d. amending the Declaration of Independence. 34. On which principle did the framers of the Constitution fundamentally agree? a. that the states should form regional alliances b. the protection of individual liberty and property c. creation of a national judiciary d. recognition of the Constitution as the “supreme law of the land” 35. On which principle did the framers rest their belief in the legitimacy of government? a. the epistle of the apostle Paul to the Romans, Chapter 13 b. Paine’s view that the social contract is an agreement among individuals in society c. Rousseau’s view of the origins of property d. Locke’s notion of the consent of the governed 36. In addition to their belief in a written constitution, the framers believed in dividing power within government by creating separate branches able to check and balance one another’s powers. This reflected the views of a. David Hume. b. Thomas Gordon. c. Algernon Sidney. d. The Baron of Montesquieu. 37. Many of the delegates to the Philadelphia Convention were nationalists and believed that the flaws of the Articles of Confederation could only be corrected through the creation of a a. strong national government. b. confederation of independent states. c. dissolution of the union among the states. d. abolition of the states. 38. The forces that opposed the creation of a strong national government were called a. Radicals. b. Federal Extremists. c. Federalists. d. Anti-Federalists. 39. The plan introduced at the Convention favoring large states that proposed a two chamber Congress with the lower house chosen by the people with representation based on population a. the New York Plan. b. The Virginia Plan. c. The New Jersey Plan. d. The Connecticut Compromise. 40. The plan introduced at the Convention providing for each state to be represented with one vote in Congress regardless of its size and population was known as a. the New York Plan. b. The Virginia Plan. c. The New Jersey Plan. d. The Connecticut Compromise. 41. The proposal that established two chambers of Congress, a Senate with two members from each state and a House of Representatives with members representing population was known as a. the New York Plan. b. The Virginia Plan. c. The New Jersey Plan. d. The Connecticut Compromise. 42. The series of essays written in defense of the Constitution of 1787 were entitled a. Common Sense. b. The Two Treatises of Civil Government. c. The Federalist Papers. d. Of the Original Contract. 43. Which of the following was NOT a contributor to the series of essays indicated by the previous question? a. James Madison b. Thomas Jefferson c. John Jay d. Alexander Hamilton 44. The man most responsible for drafting the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution – the Bill of Rights – was a. Thomas Jefferson. b. Thomas Paine. c. Alexander Hamilton. d. James Madison. 45. The most effective argument of the Anti-Federalists against ratification of the Constitution was that it a. would create an aristocratic tyranny. b. Posed a threat to republican government. c. Lacked a Bill of Rights. d. Would lead to a president with the powers of a monarch. 46. The Bill of Rights was originally designed to limit the powers of the a. rebellious southern states. b. New national government. c. The government of the Northwest Territory. d. The slave states. 47. Which of the following proposed during the Constitutional Convention that a committee be created to draft a Bill of Rights for inclusion in the Constitution? a. Jefferson and Madison. b. Madison and Hamilton. c. Gerry and Mason. d. Pickney and Rutledge. 48. The constitutional requirement that all persons be afforded “due process of law” can be found in a. Amendments 13 and 14. b. Amendments 5 and 6. c. Amendments 5 and 14. d. Amendments 25 and 27.