Answer:
By direct voting
Explanation:
<u>In the system of presidential democracy, the leader of the state is chosen by the direct voting of the people.</u> Each person's votes was the preferred candidate, the votes are counted and the candidate who has the majority of the votes is elected as the leader. The leader is most often called president.
In the true democratic system, the leader has to answer to the people and it is the citizens who have power over politics.
This is a different system from the parliamentary democracy in which the leader of the state is elected by the parliament.
People high in social dominance orientation tend to support policies that maintain hierarchies. According this fact, the following is true: social dominance orientation reflects the extent to which: people value social hierarchy.
A person high in social dominance <span>is most likely to support a policy, such as tax cuts for the wealthy, that maintains hierarchies.</span>
I believe the answer is: Borderline personality disorder
People with borderline personality disorder tend to have inconsistent image, moods, and behaviors.
This situation often caused the people around the victims to have a very hard time in adjusting and accepting their behavior and make it very hard for the victim to develop meaningful relationship.
Answer:
c. Retrieval
Explanation:
According to psychology, there are three processes involved in human memory:
- Encoding: this is the first step in the memory process. Encoding helps us to transform items into constructs that will be stored later in our memory.
- Storage: is the process of storing the information that was encoded earlier. It can be stored either in our short-term memory or in our long-term memory.
- Retrieval: This is the process that helps us <u>remember and bring to conscience the information that was stored earlier</u>. The process of retrieval helps us 're-access' to the information that was previously saved in our memory.
In this example, Zachariah found that once he started studying he was able to recall the information he had learned. We can see that t<u>he information was encoded and stored in his memory (otherwise he couldn't have recalled it), </u>therefore, <u>this information that was stored earlier was bring to conscience and he could "re-access" this information</u>, thus the main memory process that accounts for the fact that Zachariah could access and utilize the information in his memory is retrieval.