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Nezavi [6.7K]
4 years ago
5

During the renaissance, aesthetics changed with regard to consonances and dissonances, with which intervals being preferred?

History
1 answer:
Sveta_85 [38]4 years ago
6 0
Here is the answer. So during the Renaissance, Aesthetics changed with regard to consonances and dissonances, and the intervals that are being preferred are THIRDS and SIXTHS. The Renaissance aesthetics had been greatly influenced by humanism and individualism. Hope this answers your question. 
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What Supreme Court case found that blacks, both slaves and free - "cannot be, nor ever were intended to be citizens"
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3 years ago
Ancient Egypt was a polytheistic society. What does this mean?
Papessa [141]
B- Egyptians worshipped many gods

By breaking down the word "polytheistic" into it's components you can derive the answer. Poly, which is a prefix meaning many and the word theistic, which is defined as the belief in the existence of a god or gods. Therefore, the polytheistic society indicates the belief in many gods.
4 0
3 years ago
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What was the purpose of the post world war 2 war crime trials ?​
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The law is one way to seek justice after genocide. After World War II, both international and domestic courts conducted trials of accused war criminals. Beginning in the winter of 1942, the governments of the Allied powers announced their determination to punish Axis war criminals.

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3 years ago
What independent nations are formed in 14 points
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The points have specific provisions dealing with Russia/Belgium/France<span> (including the </span>Alsace-Lorraine<span>), </span>Italy/Austria-Hungary<span>, </span>Balkan<span> nations/Turkey (and the Dardanelles), the formation of an independent Polish state. 14. 'A general association of nations…' which will become the League of Nations.</span>
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3 years ago
How does natural law differ from government lae how does natural law differ from government laws
Rudik [331]

Some argue that this is a misguided question. They say that Locke’s political philosophy is not based on natural law at all, but instead on natural rights, like the philosophy of Thomas Hobbes. This is probably the greatest controversy in Locke interpretation today. Natural law theories hold that human beings are subject to a moral law. Morality is fundamentally about duty, the duty each individual has to abide by the natural law. Thomas Hobbes created a new approach when he based morality not on duty but on right, each individual’s right to preserve himself, to pursue his own good—essentially, to do as he wishes.

Is Locke a follower of Hobbes, basing his theory on right rather than natural law? What difference does it make? One characteristic of a rights theory is that it takes man to be by nature a solitary and independent creature, as in Hobbes’s “state of nature.” In Hobbes’s state of nature, men are free and independent, having a right to pursue their own self-interest, and no duties to one another. The moral logic is something like this: nature has made individuals independent; nature has left each individual to fend for himself; nature must therefore have granted each person a right to fend for himself. This right is the fundamental moral fact, rather than any duty individuals have to a law or to each other. The priority of individual right reflects our separateness, our lack of moral ties to one another. According to Hobbes, one consequence of this is that the state of nature is a “war of all against all”: human beings are naturally at war with one another. Individuals create societies and governments to escape this condition. Society is not natural to man, but is the product of a “social contract,” a contract to which each separate individual must consent. The sole purpose of the contract is to safeguard the rights of each citizen.

This is the basic recipe for the political philosophy of liberalism—Locke’s philosophy. Locke speaks of a state of nature where men are free, equal, and independent. He champions the social contract and govern­ment by consent. He goes even farther than Hobbes in arguing that govern­ment must respect the rights of individuals. It was Locke’s formula for limited govern­ment, more than Hobbes’s, that inspired the American Founding Fathers. But what is the basis of Locke’s theory? Is it natural law or Hobbesian natural right? The Founding Fathers, in the Declaration of Independence, speak of both natural rights and natural laws. Locke does likewise. Natural law and natural right may be combined, but if they are, one must take precedence over the other. Either the individual’s right, or his duty to moral law, must come first. hope that helps!

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4 years ago
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