Beowulf
is an epic written about a thousand years back and seeking revenge initiated a
clear cycle of revenge as I will explain below.
Grendel
the beast gets angry and attacks the Hall killing people, next comes Beowulf
who kills Grendel for glory as well as for revenge purposes. Grendel’s mother
attacks the kingdom to take revenge and in return killed by Beowulf, making it
clear that revenge is a never ending cycle.
Since in Anglo-Saxon tradition the setting of Beowulf,
revenge was something held in high esteem, in my opinion any other way would
not have seemed successful for the cultural values.
Answer and Explanation:
Although Nepal's economy is mainly focused on agriculture, it faces many problems and obstacles to modernizing agriculture. The first obstacle is that the country has a low investment in technology, which prevents farmers from having access to new resources aimed at agriculture, causing them to be stuck with traditional agricultural systems and elements.
These traditional agricultural systems do not allow high productivity of crops, causing crops to be low, sales to be low and economic gain to be weak, preventing farmers from investing in better production methods.
Other challenges to this modernization are the lack of investment in research, the lack of efficient transport, the lack of a good irrigation system and a limited market.
The knowledge gap can be directly attributed to the digital divide because the differential ability to access the internet leads directly to a differential ability to use the knowledge found on the Internet. The hypothesis of knowledge gap is that people with higher socioeconomic status get the information presented by mass media faster than those with lower socioeconomic status. As a result, this marks a difference between these two segments of society.
Answer:
Laissez-faire Versus Government Intervention. Historically, the U.S. government policy toward business was summed up by the French term laissez-faire -- "leave it alone." The concept came from the economic theories of Adam Smith, the 18th-century Scot whose writings greatly influenced the growth of American capitalism.