Answer:
I'm not exactly sure what you're asking here, but a country that had a lot of iron ore was Sweden.
Answer:
Kantian Ethics
Explanation:
According to a different source, these are the options that come with this question:
- Egoism
- Act utility
- Rule utility
- Kantian Ethics
In this example, Greg is employing Kantian ethics to deal with this question. Kantian ethics are an example of a deontological moral theory. This means that an act is wrong or right not based on the consequence of the act, but based on whether this act fulfills our duty or not. In this example, Greg argues that he "must try." This is the duty he has to fulfill. Therefore, the way in which he thinks about morality is based on duties, and whether these apply to him or not.
Answer:
Munich
Explanation:
Munich is a German city that is closest to Austria. The distance between Munich and Austria is 160 km and the road distance is 329.8 km. The journey time between Munich and Austria by road is 3 h 29 min.
Munich is the second most populated city of the German state and capital of Bavaria.
Hence, the correct answer is "Munich".
Explanation:
Van der Donck was born in approximately 1618, in the town of Breda in the southern Netherlands. His father was Cornelis Gijsbrechtszoon van der Donck and his mother was Agatha Van Bergen.[5] His family was well connected on his mother's side, as her father, Adriaen van Bergen, was remembered as a hero for having helped free Breda from Spanish forces during the course of the Eighty Years' War.[6]
In 1638, van der Donck entered the University of Leiden as a law student. Leiden had rapidly become an intellectual center due to Dutch religious freedom and the lack of censorship. At Leiden, he obtained his Doctor of both laws, that is, both civil and canon law.[6] Despite a booming Dutch economy, van der Donck decided to go to the New World. To this end, he approached the patroon Kiliaen van Rensselaer, securing a post as schout, a combination of sheriff and prosecutor, for his large, semi-independent estate, Rensselaerswijck, located near modern Albany.[7]