Unit 7: Optional theme — Political philosophy
Topic 7.3: Liberty and rights Questions
Practice 20 exam-style questions for IB Philosophy Topic 7.3. Review the question stems below, then unlock the full Question Bank to access markschemes, model answers, and AI grading.
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.3
What speech does Mill's principle let us limit?
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.3
True or false? On Mill's principle, being deeply offended by someone's speech is enough to justify banning it.
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.3
Why is hate speech the hard case for the harm principle?
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.3
The key difference between harm and offence is that:
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.1
True or false? Human rights depend on a government granting them.
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.1
To say human rights are 'inalienable' means:
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.2
The difference between negative and positive liberty is roughly:
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.1
Naess's 'deep ecology' argues that:
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.1
How do rights link to duties?
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.1
A 'right', in philosophy, is best described as:
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.1
The key difference between a legal right and a human right is that:
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.2
How can the two liberties conflict in real politics?
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.1
Fill the gap: every right is a matching ______ for someone else — your right to speak means others must not silence you.
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.2
On the negative-liberty view, you are free when:
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.3
Fill the gap: Mill's harm principle lets you limit someone's liberty only to prevent ______ to others.
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.2
Why does positive liberty carry a risk of turning into control?
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.2
Positive liberty is best summed up as:
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.2
True or false? Negative liberty means the state has given you an official list of things you're allowed to do.
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.3
Why is freedom of information a guard on power?
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2025• Aimnova original Paper 1 practice — 7.3.3
Mill's harm principle says you may limit someone's liberty:
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