PrepTest 64, Section 3, Question 20
One should not play a practical joke on someone if it shows contempt for that person or if one believes it might bring significant harm to that person.
One should not play a practical joke on someone if it shows contempt for that person or if one believes it might bring significant harm to that person.
One should not play a practical joke on someone if it shows contempt for that person or if one believes it might bring significant harm to that person.
One should not play a practical joke on someone if it shows contempt for that person or if one believes it might bring significant harm to that person.
The principle stated above, if valid, most helps to justify the reasoning in which one of the following arguments?
I should not have played that practical joke on you yesterday. Even if it was not contemptuous, I should have realized that it would bring significant harm to someone.
I have no reason to think that the practical joke I want to play would harm anyone. So, since the joke would show no contempt for the person the joke is played on, it would not be wrong for me to play it.
Because of the circumstances, it would be wrong for me to play the practical joke I had intended to play on you. Even though it would not show contempt for anyone, it could easily bring you significant harm.
It would have been wrong for me to play the practical joke that I had intended to play on you. Even though I did not have reason to think that it would significantly harm anyone, I did think that it would show contempt for someone.
Someone was harmed as a result of my practical joke. Thus, even though it did not show contempt for the person I played the joke on, I should not have played it.
0 Comments