Answer:
B. Referendum this is the correct answer
For his own sake, no. What he did blatantly put himself in danger and finally was placed under interrogation, etc & so forth.
For the sake of science, yes. What he did, and the consequences thereof, would have publicised his struggle, especially during the age of Enlightenment. Although what he did might also have momentarily pushed people away from science in fear of the consequences of facing the church due to the harsh punishment that he was subjected to. His persistence was, in the end only healthy for the development of science in later years.
Answer:
The answer is B im pretty sure
Explanation:
<span>The Athenian Acropolis, a temple complex dedicated to Athena, was destroyed by the Persians under the command of Xerxes in roughly 480 BCE during its long construction time. Perseopolis was capital of the Persian empire, and it would make sense that Alexander would burn it to the ground as revenge for the earlier attack against the Greek sacred space.
The remaining portions of the Acropolis ruins we are familiar with now were actually built AFTER Xerxes sacked Athens and the Persians were driven out of the city.</span>
Answer:
fighting for economic freedom
Explanation: