IN THE SITUATION JUNGLE BOOK THE BOY JUST GETS LOST WHEN HE WAS LITTLE BABY HE LIVE MOST OF HIS LIFE IN A JUNGLE , HE HAS TO STOP EVIL AND FIND OUT WHERE HE REALLY CAME FROM SO WHAT EVER IT DOES WITH SNOW CAMP FIGURE OUT BE BRAVE AND SMART LIKE IN JUNGLE BOOK
Answer:
OC: data comparing the cost of the average school uniform versus regular clothes
Explanation:
the other options can be used against school uniforms.
Energetic, mobile, agile, lively, dynamic
Answer: A
Explanation:
"Reality is weirdly normal." It's "normal" in odd ways, by strange means, in surprising senses.
At the risk of vivisecting poetry, and maybe of stating the obvious, I'll point out that the maxims mean different things by "normal". In the first two, what's "normal" or "usual" is the universe taken on its own terms — the cosmos as it sees itself, or as an ideally calibrated demon would see it. In the third maxim, what's "normal" is the universe humanity perceives — though this still doesn't identify normality with what's believed or expected. Actually, it will take some philosophical work to articulate just what Egan's "normality" should amount to. I'll start with Copernicanism and reductionism, and then I'll revisit that question.