The answer is C, economies of scale.
The central ideas of this soliloquy are that:
Antony is so upset about Caesar's death that he can barely speak.
Antony predicts that the land will be bloodied by men fighting men.
Antony expects Caesar's ghots to seek retribution for the wrongs done.
Even though it seems that he sympathized with the conspirators, after he is left alone, Antony reveals his intentions to make the crowd attack the conspirators in bloody murder. In fact, destruction and blood will be such that Caesar might even emerge from hell accompanied by the goddess of discord.
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-listed alphabetically
<em>This should be done according to the first item that appears in the works cited; it is usually the author's last name or the first word of an article's title. </em>
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An example for that question is: Who among the population would be satisfied with the global handicap?
Surely, the government admnistrators would feel most accomplished and relieved living in a world where nobody holds the wits, brawn, or beauty to challenge their positions. After all, in any society, someone must stand out above all the others to be a successful ruler. But regarding the populace, would it be possible for anyone to feel satisfied with this imposed lifestyle? Or would it be considered too "ingenious" to feel otherwise?
For some, this could be an utopia; For the to-be handicapped, it is opression.
The correct answer is spectral evidence. The Reverant Cotton Mather was not directly involved in the Salem witch trials. However he wrote one letter to Magistrate John Richards of Boston. Mather urged caution in the use of "spectral" evidence. Supposedly the devil could assume the shape of an innocent person. Unfortunately, instead of heeding the warning against using supernatural evidence to convict accused witches, the magistrate and the courts interpreted the letter as a sign of Cotton Mather's approval of the persecution. Mather also wrote a controversial book, The Wonders of the Invisible World in which he does not condone the use of spectral evidence used to to convict the witches. However, the most intriguing detail about this book is in the foreward. Mather writes, "I live by Neighbours that force me to produce these undeserved lines". Mather endured public shaming for the rest of his life, being considered as a witch hunter. In a diary entry,he expressedconcern about God taking revenge on his family because of his failure to stop the trials.