A. Man is a social animal
B. Man is co-operative sympathetic towards members of society
C. Man is essentially peace loving
D. Man is selfish and quarrelsome
Related Mcqs:
- Which one of the following statements sums up Marx’s views about history?
A. History is nothing but a record of the wars between the various people
B. History is nothing but a succession of struggle between the oppressor and the oppressed classes
C. History is a faithful record of the past
D. None of the above - Rousseau believed that man in the “state of nature” was naturally good. Still he admitted that a true state of nature probably existed except as an ideal, a standard for comparison. His mothod for dealing with this discrepancy between reality and theory was to:
A. “Lay the facts aside, as they do not affect the question.”
B. He blamed a maid and remained silent when she was punished
C. He immediately confessed
D. He ran awa but not before returning the stolen items - Which of the following statements is not true about Bakunin’s views about property?
A. It is root cause of many evils
B. It is instrument of exploitation
C. State could not exist without it
D. It made millions happy and joyous
E. It provides superfluous luxury to few - Which one of the following statements is true about Melanchthan’s views about property?
A. It is based on natural law
B. It is based on religious law
C. State was not justified in confiscating property of church
D. State had no right to confiscate property earned even by unethical means
E. No individual had a right to hold private property - Who of the following said that in the state of nature man was nasty and brutish?
A. Hegel
B. Green
C. Hobbes
D. Bodin - Which one of the following statements depict the true nature of Defacto sovereignty?
A. A sovereignty where ultimate authority rests with the people
B. A sovereignty which has the legal right to command obedience
C. A sovereignty which is actually obeyed by the people whether it has a legal status or not
D. A sovereignty which is absolute and Incapable of limitation - Who said that man’s life in the state of nature was ‘solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short’?
A. Hobbes
B. Locke
C. Rousseau
D. Karl Marx - According to Hobbes in the state of nature man was: __________?
A. Very law abiding
B. Nasty and brutish
C. Cultured and mannered
D. Selfless and had fellow feelings - According to Locke in the state of nature man was: ___________?
A. Uncivilised
B. Nasty and brutish
C. Peace loving
D. Respected no code of conduct. - According to Rousseau the two instincts, which governed the action of man in the state of nature, were:
A. Fear and religion
B. Self-interest and fear
C. Self-preservation and sympathy towards others
D. Protection of life and property