In logic, arguments aren't described as true, rather, arguments are used to prove the validity of something.
The narrator of The Raven knows that someone is at his door because he heard a gentle knocking.
This is what the poem says:
<em>...While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,</em>
<em>As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door.
</em>However, when he opened the door, there was no one there. Later, a raven entered his room through the window, and the narrator started talking to the bird, asking it whether he will ever see his loved one again, and the answer was 'Nevermore.' <em>
</em>
<u>Answer:
</u>
As far as constructivism is concerned, knowledge does not exist outside of or separate from the individual who knows.
<u>Explanation:
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- As elucidated in the narration itself, the view of constructivism is limited to the belief that knowledge is a phenomenon constructed by the human for his own convenience and advancement.
- Based on the core principle of constructivism, the scope of knowledge can be said to be expanded only as far as the human has tried religiously to expand it to.
- Hence, it can be stated that the existence of knowledge is restricted to the individual who possesses it.
Seismology is the science that studies earthquakes: its helps us predict them (at least in which regions they're likely) and gives some information to engineers of what they need to take into account when building structures in the areas prone to earthquakes.