The correct answer is: scientific ideas, Freudian psychology, technological changes and new forms of transportation
During Modernism (1900-1930) artists and thinkers rebelled against every doctrine accepted by the Establishment.
While it exalted the mathematical scientific paradigm, to detriment of the metaphysical spirit dominant in the middle ages, Einstein's theory of relativity had demonstrated the limitations of science.
The industrial revolution had shown that technological changes caused social imbalances as well as poor living and working conditions, but innovations in the field of transportation and communication accelerated the daily life of the individual, placing movement as a factor that allows people to experience the changing world around them.
Freudian analysis of unconsciously repressed instincts revealed the lack of knowledge and control over human behavior.
Somebody who can use both hands. So in theory they are both left and right handed
Eg my auntie is ambidextrous and she can write perfectly with both her Leaft and right hand. She also doesn’t have to swap hands when knitting
Answer:
Frost uses his conflict of having to choose between two paths as he was walking through the woods one day; the path more or less traveled. The paths in the woods that Frost spoke of in his poem symbolize the routes you can take in life. This makes the poem's meaning deeper by causing the audience to relate making choices in your life to something as insignificant as choosing which path to take as you walk through the forest. Frost even goes so far as to say he may come back to that spot and choose the path he hadn't before, then going on to say that it wouldn't be likely as the path he chose will likewise lead him down more and more paths with more and more choices. This poem is ultimately of a person going through life when he comes to a crossroad, a moment where he must choose between two choices, the choice more or less popular. He thinks for a bit before starting down the path less traveled, or the choice less popular. He then thinks that perhaps he'll come back to that spot in life again one day before acknowledging that it very well may never happen as the choice he chose will bring him to other paths or choices to be made in his life. In the poem, he even goes so far as to say that the choice he made of choosing the less popular choice rather than the more popular one has led him to where he is today, which holds true, literally and figuratively.
The answer is B , rising action (: