Technology. Technological innovation represents the central source of society's problems in Fahrenheit 451. Throughout the book, Bradbury treats technology as inherently anesthetizing and destructive. In the prehistory of the novel, technology played an important role in the social decline of reading.
D. It’s not talking about the process or effects of cloning, it’s talking about two random clones, therefore you wouldn’t use it in your paper because it’s irrelevant
Answer:
Subjective norm.
Explanation:
The theory of planned behavior seeks to explain any health behavior over which the individual has control. It believes that behavior is influenced by a number of factors such as pressure from family or society, the belief that changing that behavior will be easy or difficult, the belief in one's own capacity to do it etc.
According to this theory, there are six constructs that represent a person's actual control of a certain behavior. One of those constructs is called subjective norm. It refers to the person's belief concerning whether or not that behavior is approved by others. If a person believes people who are important to him do not want him to engage in a certain behavior, he will be less likely to do it. That is Carl's situation. His lack of conviction concerning his diet comes from a subjective norm.
The correct answer is Dad fixed the car. In the first sentence, it is mentioned that the car broke down so it couldn't move at all. In the second sentence, it is mentioned that they reached the store an hour later which means that during that time the problem was solved so the car could move. This is the most logical answer since adding other options would need the presence of more information for them to be viable.