A. Religion
B. Customs
C. Common good
D. Culture
Related Mcqs:
- All rights enjoyed by the citizens must be compatible with: __________?
A. Culture
B. Civilisation
C. International understanding
D. Common welfare
E. Social customs - Which one of the following kinds of equality is not compatible with the liberal notion of equality?
A. Legal equality
B. Political equality
C. Social equality
D. Economic equality - Exponents of historical theory of rights believe that the rights:
A. Have been given by the society
B. Are the product of evolution
C. Are given by the sovereign
D. Are of divine origin - Theory of natural rights has been criticised because it makes rights:
A. Too flexible
B. Too rigid
C. Too static
D. Too un-understandable - The Political rights are those rights:
A. Which provide a voice to the people in the political affairs of the state
B. Which provide a voice to the people in the political affairs of the state
C. Which are enforced by the court
D. Which are of compulsory nature - Which one of the following rights are more fundamental in the sense that other rights are dependent on them?
A. Economic Rights
B. Civil Rights
C. Political Rights
D. Constitutional Rights - The Fundamental Rights imply the rights:
A. Which are indispensable for the growth of human personality
B. Which a man inherits from nature at the time of his birth
C. Which are enforced by the state
D. Which impose no obligation on a state - The Theory of Natural Rights holds that: ________?
A. Rights are a divine creation
B. Rights came from pre-civil society
C. Rights were granted by the King
D. Rights are granted by the constitution - One of the major merits of the natural rights theory is: ________?
A. It assumes that rights can exist independent of society
B. It holds that rights are static
C. It lists the rights which man brought with him from state of nature
D. It asserts that certain rights are basic and therefore necessary for human existence - ________ argues that the wrong types of literature and music can corrupt the youth of Greece, and must therefore be strictly controlled:
A. Xenophon
B. Aristotle
C. Socrates
D. None of these