1) Communicating in a manner that is clear, concise, truthful and responsible. a) The Golden Rule Standard b) Distorting Visuals c) Communication Ethics d) Circular Argument 2) The process of interchanging thoughts, opinions, or information by the means of writing, speech or signs. a) Circular Argument b) Red Herring c) Selective Misquoting d) Communication 3) It deals with the values relating to human conduct; a system of moral principles. a) Ethics b) Aristotle c) Misrepresenting Numbers d) Excess compensation 4) This threatens the quality of all communication and consequently the well-being of individuals and the society. a) Nepotism b) Unethical Communication c) Jargon d) Gene R. Laczniak 5) A philosopher who believed that "anyone given time to think and question, could gain insight into universally accepted rules of moral conduct." a) Socrates b) Self-dealing c) Gene R. Laczniak d) Communication Ethics 6) A philosopher who developed the definition of "virtue ethics" which means that a virtuous individual will do the right thing primarily because he or she is of good character. a) Respect b) Jargon c) Ad Hominem d) Aristotle 7) Principle of communication ethics that builds trust, helps you identify and work on any fissures that may rise between authority, power and teamwork. a) Respect b) Selective Misquoting c) Honesty d) Self-dealing 8) Principle of communication ethics willingness to share information that has the potential for decision-making of the company. a) Misrepresenting Numbers b) Deontological Ethics c) Transparency d) Ethics 9) Principle of communication ethics that will help promote a culture of open communication, decreasing potential retaliation and reporting concerns. a) Ethical Egiosm b) Ad Hominem c) Respect d) Transparency 10) It is ethical to speak with simple, easy-to-understand words resulting in portions of the presentation/communication being incomprehensible to a portion of the audience. a) Jargon b) Distorting Visuals c) Selective Misquoting d) Conflict of Interest 11) Ethical framework whereas it is regarded as universal and always applicable whatever the circumstance is. a) Deontological Ethics b) Self-dealing c) Gene R. Laczniak d) The Professional Ethic 12) Ethical framework that focuses on results and whether or not it would benefit the majority. a) The “60- Minute Test” b) Utilitarian Ethics c) Respect d) Honesty 13) Ethical framework that emphasizes character as opposed to duty of consequence. a) The Professional Ethic b) Gene R. Laczniak c) Distorting Visuals d) Virtue Ethics 14) Fallacy in communicating intended to distract attention from the main issue, particularly by relating the issue to a common fear. a) Circular Argument b) The Professional Ethic c) Aristotle d) Red Herring 15) Argument against the man instead of against his message. Stating that someones argument is wrong solely because of something about the person rather than about the argument itself. a) Ethical Message b) Unethical Communication c) Ad Hominem d) Ethics 16) The proposition is used to prove itself. Assumes the very thing it aims to prove. Related to begging the question a) Misrepresenting Numbers b) Circular Argument c) Excess compensation d) Communication 17) To communicate ethically, we should not hide negativeinformation behind an optimistic attitude. a) Ethical Message b) Jargon c) Virtue Ethics d) Respect 18) He suggests five ethical standards that may help communicators decide how to behave in a principled manner. a) Gene R. Laczniak b) Conflict of Interest c) Ethical Egiosm d) Utilitarian Ethics 19) An unethical communication which steals someone else’s words or work and claiming it as your own. a) Conflict of Interest b) Plagiarism c) Ethical Message d) Aristotle 20) Deliberately omitting damaging or unflattering comments to paint a better (but untruthful) picture of you or your company. a) Ethical Egiosm b) Plagiarism c) Honesty d) Selective Misquoting 21) Increasing or decreasing numbers, exaggerating, altering statistics, or omitting numerical data. a) Self-dealing b) Red Herring c) Misrepresenting Numbers d) The “60- Minute Test” 22) Making a product look bigger or changing the scale of graphs and charts to exaggerate or conceal differences. a) Plagiarism b) Aristotle c) Respect d) Distorting Visuals 23) A situation in which an individual has competing interests or loyalties because of their duties to more than one person or organization. a) Conflict of Interest b) Jargon c) Aristotle d) Utilitarian Ethics 24) An example of conflict of interest which practices giving favors to relatives and close friends, in matters of hiring, promotion, transfer, or termination. a) Conflict of Interest b) Ethical Egiosm c) Nepotism d) Circular Argument 25) An action taken by a corporate fiduciary (someone who has a fiduciary duty) forthat person's personal gain, rather than for the benefit of the company.  a) Nepotism b) Self-dealing c) Jargon d) Aristotle 26) In a non-profit organization, setting compensation or benefits for officers, directors or trustees may result in a conflict of interest. a) Communication b) Conflict of Interest c) Excess compensation d) Red Herring 27) An ethical standard in which an individual wants to be treated by others. a) Selective Misquoting b) The Golden Rule Standard c) Excess compensation d) Nepotism 28) An ethical standard on how the action of an individual would be judged by an impartial jury of its professional peers. a) Deontological Ethics b) Communication c) The Professional Ethic d) Ethical Message 29) An ethical standard on assessing the security of explaining an individuals behavior in the famous national television show. a) Ad Hominem b) Communication Ethics c) The “60- Minute Test” d) Virtue Ethics 30) The way it ought to be. a) The “60- Minute Test” b) Ethical Egiosm c) Excess compensation d) Respect

Communication Ethics Mind Game

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