the correct answer to this question would be d. Many African Americans were essentially returned to a state of slavery.
In other words to answer this question, a form of slavery is people being forced to work at little to no pay. Therefore since people could be legally forced to work, this is considered a form of slavery.
Answer:
Assuming your referring to the Christian "Great Chain of Being" then no.
Explanation:
(I will try to be as unbiased as possible)
Just to clarify for anyone who is uniformed on what exactly the Great Chain of Being is... it is a hierarchy chart which first surfaced in Medieval Europe which goes in order as... God, Angelic Beings, Humanity, Animals, Plants, Minerals.
In the Bible it is stated numerous times (I can find the specific page and such if needed) that "great beasts" roamed the earth... now there is no historical or scientific evidence this was referring directly to Dinosaurs but there is evidence that mass extinction events have occurred all throughout history and some are event mentioned in the bible itself (The Great Flood) It is thought that about 75% of all animal life on earth was wiped out (Also most believe that some form of Humanity was alive during the supposed asteroid strike) which means that if you are arguing that a mass extinction event would mean that Great Chain of Being or basically the existence of God then you would be wrong. (Again being unbiased here, there is also no evidence that there is a "God" or Gods)
I hope this could help, my apologies if it didn't. If you need any more elaboration I will gladly try my best to help out down in the comments
The Inca civilization was entirely in South America.
Brainliest please <3
Answer:
Greek philosopher Aristotle suggested that ancient Greeks thought that being a citizen was a natural state, according to J. G. A. Pocock.[5] It was an elitist notion, according to Peter Riesenberg, in which small scale communities had generally similar ideas of how people should behave in society and what constituted appropriate conduct.[5] Geoffrey Hosking described a possible Athenian logic leading to participatory democracy:
Explanation: