Answer:
The best answer to the question: The following are examples of advances made during the Mesolithic Era, except:___, would be, C: Fishing nets.
Explanation:
The Mesolithic is a period that neatly meets between the Paleolithic Age and the Neolithic. The exact time in different regions of the world, in which this Period began, varies quite a bit. However, there have been some commonaities that have been found among the different groups of people, all of them hunter-gatherers, that lived and subsisted in particularly Northern Africa, Northern Europe and Western Europe, and parts of Asia, as far as it has been known. The first is the use of stone tools, of fine making, called microliths. The second was the advancement in the making of certains artifacts, for various reasons. Among the artifacts that have been found from this time, and that were made by people of this Era, are: pottery (the most common finding), bows and arrows, with which they would hunt, and canoes, small ones, to be able to fish, close to where they lived. The one thing they did not develop until after, was the fishing net.
The answer is: A. Ivan Pavlov
Pavlov was the researcher who first popularized the classical conditioning (where a certain conditioned response is created by associating a certain situation with a conditioned stimulus)
Counterconditioning was developed in order to reverse or reduce the effete of classical conditioning (usually carried out by enforcing positive reinforcement to the subjects)
<span>1. </span>I
believe the correct answer is the art of discourse.
Rhetoric is the art of discourse, the effective or
persuasive speaking or writing, which puts an emphasis on learning exploitation
of figures of speech and other compositional techniques. The founder of rhetoric
is Greek philosopher Aristotle, who considered rhetoric to be a counterpart of
both logic and politics. He defined rhetoric as: "the faculty of observing
in any given case the available means of persuasion.”
<span>2. </span>I
believe the correct answer is Greece.
<span>The term rhetoric has
its origins in Greek peninsula and it was derived from the Greek "rhetorike techne" meaning the "art of an
orator". This phrase comes from the word rhetor (speaker, orator, teacher
of rhetoric) which is related to the word rhesis (speech). </span>