Answer:
The Enlightenment included a range of ideas centered on the sovereignty of reason and the evidence of the senses as the primary sources of knowledge and advanced ideals such as liberty, progress, toleration, fraternity, constitutional government and separation of church and state.
Until all legally enforced public segregation (segregation de jure) was abolished by the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Through the 1920s, Britain's economy was already struggling to pay for the effects of World War I. Then, in 1929, the US stock market crashed. ... The value of British exports halved, plunging its industrial areas into poverty: by the end of 1930, unemployment more than doubled to 20 per cent.
Answer:
The first generation of computers (1940 –1956) used vacuum tubes. ... I would say it wasn't any one particular invention that made computers smaller.
Answer:
The Great Migration brought many African Americans to the Harlem Renaissance.
Explanation:
The first option would not make sense because there are lasting effects of the Harlem Renaissance such as increased civil rights for African-Americans.
The second option would not make sense because the Harlem Renaissance produced much music that we even listen to today.
The third option would not make sense because the Harlem Renaissance was a rebirth of the arts, not science.
The fourth option makes sense because the Great Migration pushed many African-Americans from the south to the north, to cities such as Harlem, where they could find new opportunities as African-Americans.