Dynamic Business Law The Essentials 3rd Edition Kubasek Test Bank 1
Dynamic Business Law The Essentials 3rd Edition Kubasek Test Bank 1
Dynamic Business Law The Essentials 3rd Edition Kubasek Test Bank 1
Chapter 07
Tort Law
True False
True False
True False
4. To be successful in an intentional tort, the plaintiff must show that the defendant intended to harm
the plaintiff.
True False
5. A defendant cannot be found liable for battery if the contact was consented to.
True False
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6. Defense of property is a defense to the offense of battery only if the property involved had a value
of over $1,000.
True False
True False
8. The Communications Decency Act gives immunity to providers of interactive computer services
for liability they might otherwise incur on account of material disseminated by them but created by
others.
True False
True False
10. A private nuisance occurs when a person permanently removes personal property from the
owner's possession and control.
True False
11. Simply offering a better deal is not enough to create liability for intentional interference with
contract when only a prospective contract exists.
True False
12. Negligence is an intentional behavior, which creates an unreasonable risk of harm to others.
True False
13. In some situations, the law specifies the duty of care one individual owes to another.
True False
14. The courts generally hold that business owners have a duty to protect customers on their
property.
True False
15. If a car stopped at a red traffic light is struck in the rear by another vehicle, it is negligence per
se.
True False
16. When negligence per se applies, the plaintiff is required to show that a reasonable person would
exercise a certain duty of care toward the plaintiff.
True False
17. Res ipsa loquitur requires that the plaintiff produce direct evidence of the defendant's lack of due
care.
True False
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18. In a pure comparative negligence defense, the defendant must be more than 50 percent at fault
for the plaintiff to recover.
True False
19. According to the pure comparative negligence defense, a defendant must be more than 60
percent at fault before the plaintiff can recover.
True False
20. Assumption of the risk is a doctrine, which makes it easier for a plaintiff to prevail in a lawsuit.
True False
21. More than half the states remain contributory negligence states.
True False
22. To use the assumption of the risk defense successfully, a defendant must prove that the plaintiff
voluntarily and unreasonably encountered the risk of the actual harm the defendant caused.
True False
23. Implied assumption of the risk occurs when the plaintiff expressly agrees, usually in a written
contract, to assume the risk posed by the defendant's behavior.
True False
24. Good Samaritan statutes impose liability upon people for refusing to stop at accident scenes.
True False
25. Under strict liability, liability may be imposed without the finding of negligence.
True False
26. The purpose of compensatory damages is to punish the defendant and deter future wrongdoers.
True False
27. Punitive damage awards in Japan are common and often very large.
True False
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28. Which of the following is a tort?
30. Which of the following was the result in Sandra Morris v. Walmart Stores Inc., the case in the text
in which the plaintiff sued the defendant after slipping in water allegedly from a freezer?
A. That the plaintiff could not recover because she had no evidence that the defendant had
knowledge of the dangerous condition prior to her fall.
B. That the plaintiff could not recover because she could had no evidence disputing the
defendant's claim that a customer spilled the liquid in which she fell.
C. That the plaintiff could recover on the basis of negligence per se.
D. That the plaintiff could rely on the theory of res ipsa loquitur.
E. That the defendant was entitled to a judgment in its favor because the plaintiff could not
establish that the defendant in general allowed dangerous conditions to exist in its stores.
32. _________ torts occur when the defendant takes an action intending that certain consequences
will result or knowing that certain consequences are likely to result.
A. Criminal
B. Liability
C. Intentional
D. Negligent
E. Strict-liability
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33. _____ torts occur when the defendant acts in a way that subjects other people to an
unreasonable risk of harm.
A. Criminal
B. Liability
C. Intentional
D. Negligent
E. Strict-liability
34. ________ torts occur when the defendant takes an action that is inherently dangerous and
cannot ever be undertaken safely, no matter what precautions the defendant takes.
A. Criminal
B. Liability
C. Intentional
D. Negligent
E. Strict-liability
35. Which of the following is true regarding the intent needed for an intentional tort?
A. The intent at issue is not intent to harm but, rather, is intent to engage in a specific act, which
ultimately results in an injury, physical or economic, to another.
B. The intent at issue is not intent to harm but, rather, is intent to engage in a specific act, which
ultimately results in a physical, not merely economic, injury to another.
C. The intent at issue is intent to harm that results in an injury, physical or economic, to another.
D. The intent at issue is intent to harm that results in physical, not merely economic, injury to
another.
E. The intent at issue is not intent to harm and is not intent to engage in a specific act. Instead,
negligence will suffice.
36. In which of the following is a category into which intentional torts are divided?
37. A(n) _________ occur(s) when one person places another in fear or apprehension of an
immediate, offensive bodily contact.
A. battery
B. assault
C. assault and battery
D. negligence
E. strict responsibility
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7. It is very important for us to observe, that these controversies have
never been questions of insulated and arbitrary Definitions, as men seem
often tempted to suppose them to have been. In all cases there is a tacit
assumption of some Proposition which is to be expressed by means of
the Definition, and which gives it its importance. The dispute concerning
the Definition thus acquires a real value, and becomes a question
concerning true and false. Thus in the discussion of the question, What is
a Uniform Force? it was taken for granted that ‘gravity is a uniform
force:’—in the debate of the Vis Viva, it was assumed that ‘in the mutual
action of bodies the whole effect of the force is unchanged:’—in the
zoological definition of Species, (that it consists of individuals which
have, or may have, sprung from the same parents,) it is presumed that
‘individuals so related resemble each other more than those which are
excluded by such a definition;’ or perhaps, that ‘species so defined have
permanent and definite differences.’ A definition of Organization, or of
any other term, which was not employed to express some principle,
would be of no value.
11. Our Conceptions, then, even when they become so clear as the
progress of knowledge requires, are not adequately expressed, or
necessarily expressed at all, by means of Definitions. We may ask, then,
whether there is any other mode of expression in which we may look for
the evidence and exposition of that peculiar exactness of thought which
the formation of Science demands. And in answer to this inquiry, we may
refer to the discussions respecting many of the Fundamental Ideas of the
sciences contained in our History of such Ideas. It has there been seen
that these Ideas involve many elementary truths which enter into the
texture of our knowledge, introducing into it connexions and relations of
the most important kind, although these elementary truths cannot be
deduced from any verbal definition of the idea. It has been seen that
these elementary truths may often be enunciated by means of Axioms,
stated in addition to, or in preference to, Definitions. For example, the
Idea of Cause, which forms the basis of the science of Mechanics, makes
its appearance in our elementary mechanical reasonings, not as a
Definition, but by means of the Axioms that ‘Causes are measured by
their effects,’ and that ‘Reaction is equal and opposite to action.’ Such
axioms, tacitly assumed or 41 occasionally stated, as maxims of
acknowledged validity, belong to all the Ideas which form the
foundations of the sciences, and are constantly employed in the
reasoning and speculations of those who think clearly on such subjects. It
may often be a task of some difficulty to detect and enunciate in words
the Principles which are thus, perhaps silently and unconsciously, taken
for granted by those who have a share in the establishment of scientific
truth: but inasmuch as these Principles are an essential element in our
knowledge, it is very important to our present purpose to separate them
from the associated materials, and to trace them to their origin. This
accordingly I attempted to do, with regard to a considerable number of
the most prominent of such Ideas, in the History. The reader will there
find many of these Ideas resolved into Axioms and Principles by means
of which their effect upon the elementary reasonings of the various
sciences may be expressed. That Work is intended to form, in some
measure, a representation of the Ideal Side of our physical knowledge;—
a Table of those contents of our Conceptions which are not received
directly from facts;—an exhibition of Rules to which we know that truth
must conform.
12. In order, however, that we may see the necessary cogency of these
rules, we must possess, clearly and steadily, the Ideas from which the
rules flow. In order to perceive the necessary relations of the Circles of
the Sphere, we must possess clearly the Idea of Solid Space:—in order
that we may see the demonstration of the composition of forces, we must
have the Idea of Cause moulded into a distinct Conception of Statical
Force. This is that Clearness of Ideas which we stipulate for in any one’s
mind, as the first essential condition of his making any new step in the
discovery of truth. And we now see what answer we are able to give, if
we are asked for a Criterion of this Clearness of 42 Idea. The Criterion is,
that the person shall see the necessity of the Axioms belonging to each
Idea;—shall accept them in such a manner as to perceive the cogency of
the reasonings founded upon them. Thus, a person has a clear Idea of
Space who follows the reasonings of geometry and fully apprehends
their conclusiveness. The Explication of Conceptions, which we are
speaking of as an essential part of real knowledge, is the process by
which we bring the Clearness of our Ideas to bear upon the Formation of
our knowledge. And this is done, as we have now seen, not always, nor
generally, nor principally, by laying down a Definition of the
Conception; but by acquiring such a possession of it in our minds as
enables, indeed compels us, to admit, along with the Conception, all the
Axioms and Principles which it necessarily implies, and by which it
produces its effect upon our reasonings.
13. But in order that we may make any real advance in the discovery
of truth, our Ideas must not only be clear, they must also be appropriate.
Each science has for its basis a different class of Ideas; and the steps
which constitute the progress of one science can never be made by
employing the Ideas of another kind of science. No genuine advance
could ever be obtained in Mechanics by applying to the subject the Ideas
of Space and Time merely:—no advance in Chemistry, by the use of
mere Mechanical Conceptions:—no discovery in Physiology, by
referring facts to mere Chemical and Mechanical Principles. Mechanics
must involve the Conception of Force;—Chemistry, the Conception of
Elementary Composition;—Physiology, the Conception of Vital Powers.
Each science must advance by means of its appropriate Conceptions.
Each has its own field, which extends as far as its principles can be
applied. I have already noted the separation of several of these fields by
the divisions of the Books of the History of Ideas. The Mechanical, the
Secondary Mechanical, the Chemical, the Classificatory, the Biological
Sciences form so many great Provinces in the Kingdom of knowledge,
each in a great measure possessing its own peculiar fundamental
principles. Every attempt to build up a 43 new science by the application
of principles which belong to an old one, will lead to frivolous and
barren speculations.
This truth has been exemplified in all the instances in which subtle
speculative men have failed in their attempts to frame new sciences, and
especially in the essays of the ancient schools of philosophy in Greece,
as has already been stated in the History of Science. Aristotle and his
followers endeavoured in vain to account for the mechanical relation of
forces in the lever by applying the inappropriate geometrical
conceptions of the properties of the circle:—they speculated to no
purpose about the elementary composition of bodies, because they
assumed the inappropriate conception of likeness between the elements
and the compound, instead of the genuine notion of elements merely
determining the qualities of the compound. And in like manner, in
modern times, we have seen, in the history of the fundamental ideas of
the physiological sciences, how all the inappropriate mechanical and
chemical and other ideas which were applied in succession to the subject
failed in bringing into view any genuine physiological truth.
14. That the real cause of the failure in the instances above mentioned
lay in the Conceptions, is plain. It was not ignorance of the facts which
in these cases prevented the discovery of the truth. Aristotle was as well
acquainted with the fact of the proportion of the weights which balance
on a Lever as Archimedes was, although Archimedes alone gave the true
mechanical reason for the proportion.
15. It may, however, be said that this injunction that we are to employ
appropriate Conceptions only in the formation of our knowledge, cannot
be of practical use, because we can only determine what Ideas are
appropriate, by finding that they truly combine the facts. And this is to a
certain extent true. Scientific discovery must ever depend upon some
happy thought, of which we cannot trace the origin;—some fortunate
cast of intellect, rising above all rules. No maxims can be given which
inevitably lead to discovery. No precepts will elevate a man of ordinary
endowments to the level of a man of genius: nor will an inquirer of truly
inventive mind need to come to the teacher of inductive philosophy to
learn how to exercise the faculties which nature has given him. Such
persons as Kepler or Fresnel, or Brewster, will have their powers of
discovering truth little augmented by any injunctions respecting Distinct
and Appropriate Ideas; and such men may very naturally question the
utility of rules altogether.
16. But yet the opinions which such persons may entertain, will not
lead us to doubt concerning the value of the attempts to analyse and
methodize the process of discovery. Who would attend to Kepler if he
had maintained that the speculations of Francis Bacon were worthless?
Notwithstanding what has been said, we may venture to assert that the
Maxim which points out the necessity of Ideas appropriate as well as
clear, for the purpose of discovering truth, is not without its use. It may,
at least, have a value as a caution or prohibition, and may thus turn us
away from labours certain to be fruitless. We have already seen, in the
History of Ideas, that this maxim, if duly attended to, would have at once
condemned, as wrongly directed, the speculations of physiologists of the
mathematical, mechanical, chemical, and vital-fluid schools; since the
Ideas which the teachers of these schools introduce, cannot suffice for
the purposes of physiology, which seeks truths respecting the vital
powers. Again, 45 it is clear from similar considerations that no definition
of a mineralogical species by chemical characters alone can answer the
end of science, since we seek to make mineralogy, not an analytical but a
classificatory science 1 . Even before the appropriate conception is
matured in men’s minds so that they see clearly what it is, they may still
have light enough to see what it is not.
1
This agrees with what M. Necker has well observed in his Règne Mineral,
that those who have treated mineralogy as a merely chemical science, have
substituted the analysis of substances for the classification of individuals. See
History of Ideas, b. viii. chap. iii.
Thus the knowledge that Clear and Appropriate Ideas are requisite for
discovery, although it does not lead to any very precise precepts, or
supersede the value of natural sagacity and inventiveness, may still 46 be
of use to us in our pursuit after truth. It may show us what course of
research is, in each stage of science, recommended by the general
analogy of the history of knowledge; and it may both save us from
hopeless and barren paths of speculation, and make us advance with
more courage and confidence, to know that we are looking for
discoveries in the manner in which they have always hitherto been made.
S . V.—Accidental Discoveries.
21. I have now, I trust, shown in various ways, how the Explication of
Conceptions, including in this term their clear development from
Fundamental Ideas in the discoverer’s mind, as well as their precise
expression in the form of Definitions or Axioms, when that can be done,
is an essential part in the establishment of all exact and general physical
truths. In doing this, I have endeavoured to explain in what sense the
possession of clear and appropriate ideas is a main requisite for every
step in scientific discovery. That it is far from being the only step, I shall
soon have to show; and if any obscurity remain on the subject treated of
in the present chapter, it will, I hope, be removed when we have
examined the other elements which enter into the constitution of our
knowledge.
CHAPTER III.
O F M S .
A IV.
Facts are the materials of science, but all Facts involve Ideas. Since in
observing Facts, we cannot exclude Ideas, we must, for the purposes of
science, take care that the Ideas are clear and rigorously applied.
A V.
A VI.
But such maxims are far from being easy to apply, as a little
examination will convince us.
3. But still, it cannot be doubted that in selecting the Facts which are
to form the foundation of Science, 54 we must reduce them to their most
simple and certain form; and must reject everything from which doubt or
errour may arise. Now since this, it appears, cannot be done, by rejecting
the Ideas which all Facts involve, in what manner are we to conform to
the obvious maxim, that the Facts which form the basis of Science must
be perfectly definite and certain?
This maxim, that when Facts are employed as the basis of Science, we
must distinguish clearly the Ideas which they involve, and must apply
these in a distinct and rigorous manner, will be found to be a more
precise guide than we might perhaps at first expect. We may notice one
or two Rules which flow from it.
The mixture of fancy and emotion with the observation of facts has often
disfigured them to an extent which is too familiar to all to need
illustration. We have an example of this result, in the manner in which
Comets are described in the treatises of the middle ages. In such works,
these bodies are regularly distributed into several classes, accordingly as
they assume the form of a sword, of a spear, of a cross, and so on. When
such resemblances had become matters of interest, the impressions of the
senses were governed, not by the rigorous conceptions of form and
colour, but by these assumed images; and under these circumstances, we
can attach little value to the statement of what was seen.
In all such phenomena, the reference of the objects to the exact Ideas
of Space, Number, Position, Motion, and the like, is the first step of
Science: and accordingly, this reference was established at an early
period in those sciences which made an early progress, as, for instance,
Astronomy. Yet even in astronomy there appears to have been a period
when the predominant conceptions of men in regarding the heavens and
the stars pointed to mythical story and supernatural influence, rather than
to mere relations of space, time, and motion: and of this primeval
condition of those who gazed at the stars, we seem to have remnants in
the Constellations, in the mythological Names of the Planets, and in the
early prevalence of Astrology. It was only at a later period, when men
had begun to measure the places, or at least to count the revolutions of
the stars, that Astronomy had its birth.
11. Thus the first attempts to render observation certain and exact, lead
to a decomposition of the obvious facts into Elementary Facts, connected
by the Ideas of Space, Time, Number, Cause, Likeness, and others: and
into a Classification of the Simple Facts; a classification more or less
just, and marked by Names either common or technical. Elementary
Facts, and Individual Objects, thus observed and classified, form the
materials of Science; and any improvement in Classification or
Nomenclature, or any discovery of a Connexion among the materials
thus accumulated, leads us fairly within the precincts of Science. We
must now, therefore, consider the manner in which Science is built up of
such materials;—the process by which they are brought into their places,
and the texture of the bond which unites and cements them.
CHAPTER IV.
O C F .
A VII.
A VIII.
A IX.
6. But how are we, in these cases, to discover such Ideas, and to judge
which will be efficacious, in leading to a scientific combination of our
experimental data? To this question, we must in the first place answer,
that the first and great instrument by which facts, so observed with a
view to the formation of exact knowledge, are combined into important
and permanent truths, is that peculiar Sagacity which belongs to the
genius of a Discoverer; and which, while it supplies those distinct and
appropriate Conceptions which lead to its success, cannot be limited by
rules, or expressed in definitions. It would be difficult or impossible to
describe in words the habits of thought which led Archimedes to refer
the conditions of equilibrium on the Lever to the Conception of pressure,
while Aristotle could not see in them anything more than the results 64 of
the strangeness of the properties of the circle;—or which impelled Pascal
to explain by means of the Conception of the weight of air, the facts
which his predecessors had connected by the notion of nature’s horrour
of a vacuum;—or which caused Vitello and Roger Bacon to refer the
magnifying power of a convex lens to the bending of the rays of light
towards the perpendicular by refraction, while others conceived the
effect to result from the matter of medium, with no consideration of its
form. These are what are commonly spoken of as felicitous and
inexplicable strokes of inventive talent; and such, no doubt, they are. No
rules can ensure to us similar success in new cases; or can enable men
who do not possess similar endowments, to make like advances in
knowledge.
8. But it has very often happened in the history of science, that the
erroneous hypotheses which preceded the discovery of the truth have
been made, not by the discoverer himself, but by his precursors; to whom
he thus owed the service, often an important one in such cases, of
exhausting the most tempting forms of errour. Thus the various fruitless
suppositions by which Kepler endeavoured to discover the law of
reflection, led the way to its real detection by Snell; Kepler’s numerous
imaginations concerning the forces by which the celestial motions are
produced,—his ‘physical reasonings’ as he termed them,—were a natural
prelude to the truer physical reasonings of Newton. The various
hypotheses by which the suspension of vapour in air had been explained,
and their failure, left the field open for Dalton with his doctrine of the
mechanical mixture of gases. In most cases, if we could truly analyze the
operation of the thoughts of those who make, or who endeavour to make
discoveries in science, we should find that many more suppositions pass
through their minds than those which are expressed in words; many a
possible combination of conceptions is formed and soon rejected. There
is a constant invention and activity, a perpetual creating and selecting
power at work, of which the last results only are exhibited to us. Trains
of hypotheses are called up and pass rapidly in review; and the judgment
makes its choice from the varied group.
10. The Conceptions which a true theory requires are very often
clothed in a Hypothesis which connects 67 with them several superfluous
and irrelevant circumstances. Thus the Conception of the Polarization of
Light was originally represented under the image of particles of light
having their poles all turned in the same direction. The Laws of Heat
may be made out perhaps most conveniently by conceiving Heat to be a
Fluid. The Attraction of Gravitation might have been successfully
applied to the explanation of facts, if Newton had throughout treated
Attraction as the result of an Ether diffused through space; a supposition
which he has noticed as a possibility. The doctrine of Definite and
Multiple Proportions may be conveniently expressed by the hypothesis
of Atoms. In such cases, the Hypothesis may serve at first to facilitate the
introduction of a new Conception. Thus a pervading Ether might for a
time remove a difficulty, which some persons find considerable, of