The correct answer is :
- Two Wheel Bicycle manufactures more bicycles.
- Employees get a raise.
- Two Wheel Bicycle increases its advertising budget.
- The owner opens another Two Wheel Bicycle store.
Both self-examination and midlife crisis is characterized as a midlife transition. So, option C, both (a) and (b) is the correct answer.
<h3>
What is midlife transition?</h3>
Between the ages of 35 and 45, people go through a midlife transition.
People frequently perform self-examinations during this time to see if they are living up to their full potential.
If they believe they don't, they are prone to have a midlife crisis and seek out other forms of excitement to help them cope with their desperation.
For more information about the midlife transition, refer below
brainly.com/question/1169659
Answer:
Carpathian Mountain and Transylvanina Alps
Answer:
b)
Explanation:
Moral realism refers to the ethical view which states that there exist such things as moral facts and moral values, and that these are objective and independent of our perception of them or our beliefs, feelings or other attitudes towards them. In other words, moral judgments describe moral facts, which are as certain in their own way as mathematical facts. Moral realism uses the ordinary rules of logic to be applied for moral statements.
For moral realists, the universe contains absolute moral structures, so this means that there are in fact "right" and "wrong" facts in the universe and this is objective.
Thus, the correct answer is b) The view that the universe contains an absolute moral structure, an objective moral framework of moral facts or truths.
<em><u>Note:</u></em>
<em><u>a) Moral realism doesn't think that only God has access to the moral truths.</u></em>
<em><u>c) Moral realism does think that the universe contains moral structure.</u></em>
<em><u>d) Moral realism thinks that this structure is independent from humans.</u></em>
<em><u>e) Moral realism is actually more complex than that because it's not based on friends or enemies. </u></em>