C. emotional stability.
A. Agreeableness is what it sounds like... Willing to be agreeable... Willing to agree.
B. Conscientiousness is also what it sounds like...to be conscious of what's going on around you and within you (external and internal locus of control).
D. Disposition is how you view things...how you "valence" something (valence means to label something as positive or negative); your response in context to disposition is usually stable and predictable over time.
E. Extraversion basically just refers to how social or outgoing you are.
Even though emotional stability is the correct answer, it's important to understand emotional stability (aka emotional regulation) is on a scale. We all feel angry, anxious, depressed, emotional, insecure, and excitable multiple times in our lives. These are normal human emotions! However, in psychology, we start to call it "abnormal", or say there's a "lack of emotional regulation/stability" when these types of negatively valenced emotions are pervasive in everyday life. This is why the question specifies "the DEGREE to which".
Hope this helps!
There was no uniform currency, states had too much power national government had nothing. there was no military/protection other than what the states could afford themselves. there were no taxes so funding was hard.
<span>The biggest problem is that </span>the type of the autoshaped reaction fluctuates with the sort of reinforcer that is utilized.Autoshaping some of the time called "sign tracking" is any of an assortment of exploratory methodology used to traditional conditioning. In the methodology a reinforcer is matched with a stimulus that is independent of the subjects conduct until the subject makes a reaction to the stimulus.
Answer:
The answer is c. values.
Explanation:
In ethics, values describe a judgmenet about how important an action is according to its positive or negative impact. They are often referred to as guidelines for taking a course of action.
A society may be affected by common moral, religious, political and social values.
<span>This document supports the position of the Samara assembly. Both argue that property should be handed over to the peasants and wealthy landowners should not be paid for the seized property. Additionally, both documents imply that peasants work hard for little reward.
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