Reviewer Ni Accla

You might also like

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 8

I.

True or False (10 items)


1. Lead storage batteries can be recharged using an alternator to reverse the flow of electrons.
(TRUE)
2. Hydrogen-powered fuel cells are less expensive per unit of electricity than alternative energy
sources. (FALSE)
3. When two button batteries are connected in a series, their combined rating is 3V while their
individual rating of each battery has 1.5V. (TRUE)
4. A fuel cell generates electricity when the anode receives fuel, such as hydrogen, and the
cathode receives oxygen. (TRUE)
5. The Leclanche dry cell is a galvanic cell that generally uses zinc as its cathode and
manganese dioxide as its anode. (FALSE)
6. Lead sulfate is formed as a product of the chemical reaction between electrodes and the
electrolytic solution in a lead storage battery. (TRUE)
7. It was Francis Bacon who invented the first working hydrogen-oxygen fuel cells, which
employ electrochemical processes to directly convert fuel and air into electricity. (TRUE)
8. Button batteries are not water resistant that when gets wet, the electrical current in the battery
breaks down the water to form a corrosive product. (TRUE)
9. Button batteries such as CR2032 battery is a rechargeable battery which utilizes lithium
chemistry. (FALSE)
10. Benjamin Franklin first used the term "battery" in 1749 when he was doing experiments with
electricity using a set of linked capacitors.(TRUE)

Il. Multiple Choice (10 items)


1. The development of inexpensive batteries proved to be extremely advantageous in the early
years for telegraphy. What type of battery is used back then particularly in electric bell and
signaling work?
a. Leclanché dry cell
b. Button batteries
c. Fuel cells
d. Lead storage batteries

2. The fuel cells typically use what metal catalyst to speed up the reaction at the oxygen
electrode?
a. Copper
b. Silver
c. platinum
d. Iron

3. Most people are accustomed to use secondary batteries or rechargeable batteries in vehicles
as this battery is one of the most common energy storage batteries. What type of battery is this?
a. Leclanché dry cell
b. Button batteries
c. Fuel cells
d. Lead storage batteries
4. NASA's space rockets require long-term energy storage that can sustain its internal
combustion engines. What type of cells can power electrical systems in spacecraft?
a. Leclanche dry cell
b. Button batteries
c. Fuel cells
d. Lead storage batteries

5. What are two commonly involved elements used in fuel cells to generate electricity?
a. hydrogen and helium
b. hydrogen and oxygen
c. zinc and mercury
d. lead and oxygen

6. During the discharging process of a lead-acid battery, the lead dioxide acts as:
a. Electrolyte
b. Electrode
c. anode
d. Cathode

7. Coin-like batteries which has a long shelf life can power items such as watch and car keys.
These small, spherical, and flat batteries are commonly referred to as:
a. Leclanché dry cell
b. Button batteries
c. Fuel cells
d. Lead storage batteries

8. What is the main component of fuel cell that allows charged molecules or ions to move
through it, separating the fuel (hydrogen) from the oxidant (air or oxygen).
a. Anode
b. Cathode
c. catalyst
d. proton exchange membrane

9. The first known commercial button batteries were produced in 1950 by the P.R. Mallory
Incorporation. It was purposely made for what newfangled device?
a. hearing aids
b. flashing novelties
c. glucometers
d. reading lights

10. Lead storage batteries use corrosive acids diluted with water as electrolytes during
charging. What is the most common used battery acid to be known of?
a. sulfuric acid
b. nitric acid
c. hydrochloric acid
d. bromic acid

III. Identification (10 items)


1-2. Give the two general classifications of batteries
Primary Cell and Secondary Cell
3. Advantage of Leclanche dry cell
Low Cost
4. Disadvantage of button batteries
Single Use
5. Advantage of fuel cells
Renewable and easily accessible
6. Disadvantage of lead storage batteries
Slow Charging/Low Specific energy
7. Use of Leclanche dry cell
Flashlight
8. Use of button batteries
Scientific Calculator/Thermometer
9. Use of fuel cells
Power for Vehicles
10. Use of lead storage batteries
Nuclear Submarines
INTRODUCTION TO THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE HUMAN PERSON

1. The human behavior can be controlled through


A. positive reinforcements
B. negative reinforcements
C. both positive and negative reinforcements
D. neither positive nor negative reinforcements

2. The study of conscious experience as experienced from the first person point of view
A. Psychology
B. Phenomenology
C. Archeology
D. Reflexology

3-5
A. Intrinsic Value
C. Contributory Value
B. Instrumental Value
D. Originative Value

3 . The value it has in itself apart from or independent of its consequences. Intrinsic Value
4. The theory which introduces new values to the world. Originative Value
5. The theory of value that focuses on the value contribution that human action affects.
Contributory Value

6-10
A. Agrarian Society
C. Education Society
B. Industrial Society
D. Virtual/Social Networks

6. The social system whose mode of production focuses primarily on finished goods that were
made with the aid of machines. Industrial Society
7. The internet age, societies took a different turn as they enhance telecommunication systems
and computing technology. Virtual/Social Networks
8. The social system formed by people who organized themselves to cultivate the land and
produce food. Agrarian Society
9. The social system whose process of receiving o giving systematic instruction, this society is
composed of people whose main role is to transfer knowledge or information. Education Society
10. The society that is based on the use of machines and non-animal sources of energy to
produce finished goods. Industrial Society
11. Signal of end of life.
A. Death
B. Resurrection
C. Burial
D. Epitaph

12.It is the inscription on a tomb or a grave in memory of a person buried there.


A. Cemetery
B. Crematory
C. Burial
D. Epitaph

13. The common acts seen in graves are the following, except.
A. Grieving
B. Funeral rites
C. Felicity
D. Burial

14. Act of killing oneself because of not wanting to continue to live


A. Dasein
B. Cremation
C. Suicide
D. Self-Actualization

15-20
A. The self in Isolation
B. The Self in Realm of Pretentions
C. The Self in the Realm of Manipulation
D. The Self in the Realm of Selfishness

15.. The "I" is the center of relationship. The self in Isolation


16. I create your world and you must only think, feel and act within its boundary. The Self in the
Realm of Manipulation
17. The person does not establish relational interaction with others. The self in Isolation
18. Deception is a hindrance toward the establishment of communicative situation or dialogue
between human beings. The Self in Realm of Pretentions
19. Self-centeredness is another factor that hinders the establishment communicative
manifestation. The Self in the Realm of Selfishness
20. "You act according to the image that I set". The Self in the Realm of Manipulation

21-25
A. Real happiness
B. Useful good
C. Noble good
D. Pleasurable good

21. The kind of good as long as it serves as a means to an end. Useful good
22. This can be found in a more permanent and meaningful things. Real happiness
23. This kind of goodness provides pleasure, but doesn't to be physical. Pleasurable good
24. The goodness which is pursued for its own sake. Noble good
25. Its goodness is found only from what it provides. Pleasurable good

26-30
A. Being-in-itself
B. Being-for-itself
C. Being-for-others

26. The expression of his freedom contributes for the realization of a more humane society
27. Refers to what is static and self-contained. It represents human (Being-for-itself)
Facticity. (Being-in-itself)
28. Ability of human to express the fullness of his freedom by way of
Transcendence (Being-for-itself)
29. En-sol (Being-in-itself)
30. Pour - autrui (Being-for-others)

31- 34
A. conscious level
B. pre-conscious level
C. unconscious level

31. The mental state that pertains to the memories and stored knowledge that a person Is not
currently aware of but can be brought to the present awareness easily by the process of
remembering (Pre-concious level)
32. Pertains to those fears, motives, sexual desires, wishes, urges,
Needs. (Unconcious level)
33. Past experiences that a person is not currently aware of (pre-concious level)
34.The mental state that pertains to a person's current awareness. (concious level)

35-38
A. Happiness
B. Suffering
c. Real happiness
D. Death

35. Happens when people patiently endures unpleasantness, discomfort and pain. It can be
experienced physically or mentally. (Suffering)
36. It is a state of being, not just an emotional experience or a ch mental attitude (Happiness)
37. The separation of the body and soul. (Death)
38. It is found in more permanent and meaningful things. (Real Happiness)

39-42
A. Self determination
B. Abandonment
C. Anguish
D. Autonomous being

39. The existential condition of being thrown into one's existence with nothing to cling to as
guide. (Abandonment)
40. Innate capacity of the human person to determine his/her decisions and actions and
ultimately his/her own life amidst constraining conditions. (Self-Determination)
41. The feeling of being burdened by his/her own awareness of his/her own total responsibility.
(Anguish)
42. One does not have an authority other than its reason. (Autonomous Being)

43-45
A. Politics of Recognition
B. Politics of Difference
C. Infinite Responsibility

43. Exposes the reality of structural injustice (Politics of Difference)


44. Democracy is all about- gender and cultural equality (Politics of Recognition)
45. Means that to be truly human, one has to be ultimately responsible for the other (Infinite
responsibility)

46-50
A. Ethics of Care
B. Empathy
C. Alienation
D. Availability

46. Refers to the state when a person ceases to view the other as a distinct and authentic
person. (ALIENATION)
47. It enables a person to place himself the shoes of others and leads to a greater
understanding and appreciation of other. (EMPATHY)
48. Emphasizes the moral dimension of human interactions. (ETHICS OF CARE)
49. The willingness of a person to be present for another and to render assistance to another.
(AVAILABILITY)
50. It belleves that people have a moral obligation to respond to the need of others. (ETHICS
OF CARE)

You might also like