Is that it’s always changing
Answer: The population density of one's current geographic residence.
Explanation:
Daniel Kennedy and Ralph Adolphs, both from the California Institute of Technology, noted in an essay published in the same issue of Nature.
Kennedy and Adolphs noted that city populations might, to a certain extent, be a self-selecting population. "There are wide variations in individuals' preferences for, and ability to cope with, city life: some thrive in New York City; others would happily swap it for a desert island," they wrote in their essay. One key reason for this might be "the perceived degree of control that people have over their daily lives."
Kennedy and Adolphs Also suggested future work focusing on ways of "softening" the urban landscape via better architecture and urban planning.
Even though city dwellers showed differences in their brains, their levels of the stress hormone cortisol was on par with their rural peers.
Social threat, lack of control and subordination are all likely candidates for mediating the stressful effects of city life, and probably account for much of the individual differences."
Dr Daniel Kennedy and Prof Ralph Adolphs, both at the California Institute of Technology, said that there are wide variations in a people's preferences for, and ability to cope with, city life.
According to Luther’s criticism, the ability to grant forgiveness of sins belongs only to God.
Explanation:
Martin Luther was an influential clergyman in Europe during the Renaissance era. He hanged 95 of his thesis from a church door and it resulted in a Protestant revolution that challenged the commonly held ideas of the Church and how it must function.
It was one of the most influential of his ideas that priests cannot take confessions and dictate who can and cannot go to heaven as it is a mandate reserved for the God and none else.
Candide portrays the suffering of a great many of its characters, however, the female characters in the novel are by far the worst off.
Explanation:
The female characters face harsher realities due to the inherent discrimination in the story.
<u>Often, they are used as symbols of desires and lust. Men fight over women and lots of violence instigated is misogynistic.</u>
The women do not believe, unlike the men, that all things must end for the good. The women in the book it seems understand the folly in this statement because of their plight.
<u>Cunegonde's possession by a series of men who are hostile to her and Old woman held hostage by Moroccan pirates </u>suffer incessantly in the book and this reveals the central allegory of the book:<u> that all things are not meant for well.</u>