Answer:
The answer is A
Explanation:
Worcester v. Georgia, legal case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on March 3, 1832, held (5–1) that the states did not have the right to impose regulations on Native American land. Although Pres. Andrew Jackson refused to enforce the ruling, the decision helped form the basis for most subsequent law in the United States regarding Native Americans.
Answer:
The correct response is Option D: Challenge your own and others' assumptions that are not supported by evidence.
Explanation:
Critical thinking is the ability to thoughtfully consider ideas and arguments. A critical thinker also has the ability to be reflexive and to recognize the limits of his own thought process and to think independently. Young people learn critical thinking by participating in debates where they can explore alternative explanations and consider different kinds of evidence. This is also called claim-evidence reasoning using statements like "Should cellular phones be banned in school?" Critical thinking is an important mindset for excelling in higher education and in when addressing complex social and scientific problems.
Answer:
To protect the nation against tyranny by separating the powers of government.
Explanation:
By "limiting" the government , we create a system where the power to run the country does not belong to one single institution. We're separating that power into different branches.
With this separation, one branch of that government can control/interfere the other branch if they're trying to do something unlawful.
For example, if the legislative branch wanted to create a legislation that violate the right of citizens, the judicial branch can intervene and prevent that legislation from being passed.
This limitation will prevent the government from becoming a tyranny.
I think false positive, Hope that was correct.
Answer:
Southern culture was strongly shaped by religion. Before the American Revolution, the Anglican Church served as the established church throughout the southern colonies. The rise of Protestant evangelicalism in the 1740s posited a fledgling alternative to the Anglican establishment. For evangelicals, the conversion experience was upheld as a universally attainable route to spiritual salvation. It employed highly emotional sermons and liturgies—many of them at large, interdenominational, outdoor camp meetings—to facilitate this conversion experience among believers.
Explanation: