Answer:
Making judgments about whether a person is morally responsible for her behavior, and holding others and ourselves responsible for actions and the consequences of actions, is a fundamental and familiar part of our moral practices and our interpersonal relationships.
Explanation:
Moral responsibility refers to a call to action, where the opposite(inaction) would result in a moral failure. an example would be if you see a person choking, and you know how to perform the Heimlich manuver but rather than help you do nothing. You are by inaction assisting in that persons death.
In the excerpt, it is inferred that D. Nora is considering killing herself.
After Krogstad discovers that Nora has committed fraud against him, she realizes he could use that information to blackmail her husband. In this way, he would not lose his job but he would get a higher position. So Nora thinks about suicide as the only way to escape, but Krogstad warns her he will write Torvald a letter telling everything anyways.
In the final chapter of his narrative, Douglass explains that he does not describe his escape with precision, because he does not want to give any advantage to slave owners. Giving them too many details of how did he escape would help slave owners to prevent the escape of their slaves to the North. Douglass hopes to generate in the slave owners a certain feeling of paranoia, and make it as difficult as possible for them to retain their slaves.