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Test Resentment and the sense of justice
Agenda
QUESTION 1: What is resentment, according to the text?
Anger towards someone who has treated us well
A complex emotion that arises from a feeling of injustice and chronic anger
Admiration for someone superior
A feeling of superiority
QUESTION 2: What is contempt, its counterpart?
The feeling of inferiority
Envy
Resentment
The feeling of superiority and devaluation towards someone considered inferior
QUESTION 3: What term did Nietzsche coin to describe the defense mechanism of resentment?
Revaluation of values
Sublimation of resentment
Denial of injustice
Transcendence of the ego
QUESTION 4: What positive function can resentment have?
An always destructive emotion
A sensitive detector of real injustices
A way to justify revenge
An emotion that leads to apathy
QUESTION 5: What is "vigilante justice" in the context of unmanaged resentment?
Where the goal is equity
Where the goal is the destruction of the offender, not equity, out of a disproportionate desire for revenge
An act of compassion
A form of proportional self-defense
QUESTION 6: What does emotional intelligence require even when resentment is justified?
Seeking disproportionate revenge
Justify the offense
Ignore resentment
Seeking justice that is proportional and restorative, not vengeful
QUESTION 7: What type of emotion is resentment in relation to contempt?
An emotion that looks "downward"
The emotion of the aggrieved, while contempt is the emotion of the arrogant
The thrill of the arrogant
An emotion of equality
QUESTION 8: What can legitimate resentment be?
A sign of weakness
A sign that our rights or dignity have been violated
A useless impulse
A positive emotion without nuances
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