TEST BANK for Death, Society, and Human
Experience, 13th Edition by Robert
Kastenbaum
Exam
1. According to Kastenbaum, which of the following best defines death anxiety?
A) Fear of dying before achieving life goals
B) A learned cultural response to mortality
C) A universal, multifaceted dread of non-existence
D) A symptom of clinical depression
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Death anxiety encompasses fears of oblivion, loss of self, separation, and the unknown—not
just situational or pathological fears.
2. Which historical period is associated with the "death denial" thesis in Western society?
A) Middle Ages
B) Renaissance
C) Modern era (20th century)
D) Ancient Greece
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The modern era, particularly post-WWII, is often characterized by medicalization, hiding of
death, and avoidance of open discussion.
3. What is the "taming of death" according to Philippe Ariès?
A) Ritualizing death to make it familiar and community-centered
B) Completely removing death from public view
C) Using medicine to postpone death indefinitely
D) Legalizing euthanasia
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Ariès described the medieval "tamed death" as a familiar, expected event with rituals
involving the dying person and community.
4. Kastenbaum argues that thanatology is:
A) The study of near-death experiences only
B) The scientific study of death, dying, and bereavement
C) A branch of forensic medicine
,D) A religious doctrine about afterlife
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Thanatology is interdisciplinary, examining biological, psychological, social, spiritual, and
cultural aspects of death.
5. Which statement best represents Kastenbaum's view on children's understanding of death?
A) Children under 5 universally understand death's irreversibility
B) Magical thinking about death disappears completely by age 10
C) Understanding develops in stages but is also influenced by experience and culture
D) Children should not be exposed to death until adolescence
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Cognitive development (Piagetian stages) interacts with personal experiences (e.g., pet death)
and cultural messages.
6. A patient with terminal cancer who asks "Why me?" is primarily demonstrating:
A) Bargaining
B) Denial
C) Anger
D) Acceptance
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Kastenbaum notes that "Why me?" often reflects anger at fate, God, or the unfairness of life,
not just intellectual questioning.
7. Which of the following is NOT one of Kastenbaum's key dimensions of death anxiety?
A) Fear of pain and suffering
B) Fear of leaving loved ones
C) Fear of losing control
D) Fear of reincarnation
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Fear of reincarnation is not a core dimension; common dimensions include fear of the
unknown, loss of self, and impact on survivors.
8. Kastenbaum criticizes Kübler-Ross's stage model for:
A) Being too biological
B) Overemphasizing spirituality
C) Implying a linear, universal sequence that all dying people follow
D) Ignoring physical symptoms
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: He argues stages are not fixed, not experienced by all, and lack empirical support for a
predictable order.
, 9. In the context of thanatology, "disenfranchised grief" refers to:
A) Grief that is unusually prolonged beyond 12 months
B) Loss that is not socially recognized or validated
C) Grief expressed only in private settings
D) Grief that leads to suicide
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Examples include loss of a pet, ex-spouse, miscarriage, or stigmatized death (e.g., suicide).
10. A hospice's primary goal is:
A) Cure the underlying disease
B) Extend life as long as possible using all available means
C) Improve quality of life at end of life
D) Provide only spiritual care without medical intervention
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Hospice focuses on comfort, dignity, symptom management, and psychosocial-spiritual
support.
11. Which culture traditionally honors ancestors with ofrendas (altars) on Día de los Muertos?
A) Japan
B) Mexico
C) India
D) Italy
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Mexican tradition blends Indigenous (Aztec) and Catholic practices celebrating death as part
of life.
12. According to Kastenbaum, near-death experiences (NDEs) are best understood as:
A) Definitive proof of afterlife
B) Simple hallucinations caused by anoxia
C) Complex psychobiological events influenced by expectation, culture, and brain states
D) Exclusively religious phenomena reported only by devout believers
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Kastenbaum takes a balanced view—neither purely spiritual nor purely pathological—
considering neurobiology and psychological factors.
13. What is "complicated grief"?
A) Grief lasting less than 6 months
B) Grief that is completely absent after major loss
Experience, 13th Edition by Robert
Kastenbaum
Exam
1. According to Kastenbaum, which of the following best defines death anxiety?
A) Fear of dying before achieving life goals
B) A learned cultural response to mortality
C) A universal, multifaceted dread of non-existence
D) A symptom of clinical depression
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Death anxiety encompasses fears of oblivion, loss of self, separation, and the unknown—not
just situational or pathological fears.
2. Which historical period is associated with the "death denial" thesis in Western society?
A) Middle Ages
B) Renaissance
C) Modern era (20th century)
D) Ancient Greece
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The modern era, particularly post-WWII, is often characterized by medicalization, hiding of
death, and avoidance of open discussion.
3. What is the "taming of death" according to Philippe Ariès?
A) Ritualizing death to make it familiar and community-centered
B) Completely removing death from public view
C) Using medicine to postpone death indefinitely
D) Legalizing euthanasia
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Ariès described the medieval "tamed death" as a familiar, expected event with rituals
involving the dying person and community.
4. Kastenbaum argues that thanatology is:
A) The study of near-death experiences only
B) The scientific study of death, dying, and bereavement
C) A branch of forensic medicine
,D) A religious doctrine about afterlife
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Thanatology is interdisciplinary, examining biological, psychological, social, spiritual, and
cultural aspects of death.
5. Which statement best represents Kastenbaum's view on children's understanding of death?
A) Children under 5 universally understand death's irreversibility
B) Magical thinking about death disappears completely by age 10
C) Understanding develops in stages but is also influenced by experience and culture
D) Children should not be exposed to death until adolescence
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Cognitive development (Piagetian stages) interacts with personal experiences (e.g., pet death)
and cultural messages.
6. A patient with terminal cancer who asks "Why me?" is primarily demonstrating:
A) Bargaining
B) Denial
C) Anger
D) Acceptance
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Kastenbaum notes that "Why me?" often reflects anger at fate, God, or the unfairness of life,
not just intellectual questioning.
7. Which of the following is NOT one of Kastenbaum's key dimensions of death anxiety?
A) Fear of pain and suffering
B) Fear of leaving loved ones
C) Fear of losing control
D) Fear of reincarnation
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Fear of reincarnation is not a core dimension; common dimensions include fear of the
unknown, loss of self, and impact on survivors.
8. Kastenbaum criticizes Kübler-Ross's stage model for:
A) Being too biological
B) Overemphasizing spirituality
C) Implying a linear, universal sequence that all dying people follow
D) Ignoring physical symptoms
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: He argues stages are not fixed, not experienced by all, and lack empirical support for a
predictable order.
, 9. In the context of thanatology, "disenfranchised grief" refers to:
A) Grief that is unusually prolonged beyond 12 months
B) Loss that is not socially recognized or validated
C) Grief expressed only in private settings
D) Grief that leads to suicide
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Examples include loss of a pet, ex-spouse, miscarriage, or stigmatized death (e.g., suicide).
10. A hospice's primary goal is:
A) Cure the underlying disease
B) Extend life as long as possible using all available means
C) Improve quality of life at end of life
D) Provide only spiritual care without medical intervention
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Hospice focuses on comfort, dignity, symptom management, and psychosocial-spiritual
support.
11. Which culture traditionally honors ancestors with ofrendas (altars) on Día de los Muertos?
A) Japan
B) Mexico
C) India
D) Italy
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Mexican tradition blends Indigenous (Aztec) and Catholic practices celebrating death as part
of life.
12. According to Kastenbaum, near-death experiences (NDEs) are best understood as:
A) Definitive proof of afterlife
B) Simple hallucinations caused by anoxia
C) Complex psychobiological events influenced by expectation, culture, and brain states
D) Exclusively religious phenomena reported only by devout believers
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Kastenbaum takes a balanced view—neither purely spiritual nor purely pathological—
considering neurobiology and psychological factors.
13. What is "complicated grief"?
A) Grief lasting less than 6 months
B) Grief that is completely absent after major loss