<span>The statement that a speaker who argues that the world's monarch butterfly population is in danger because their numbers have decreased in several locations is reasoning from specific instances is true.
</span><span>In this informative speech, the speaker acts as a teacher. </span>
Answer:
The answer is "Option B"
Explanation:
A way to roll down from slope with the help of an ice ax is called glissades, and when we look at an image for a long time, our eye makes small motions of your head, this process is known as Troxler or the Troxler effect.
- It is also known as an optical illusion, that affects visual perception.
- When an unchanging sensation away from the fixation point fades away and stops, if you set a certain point for even a short time, that's why it is false.
Answer:
This is an example of masked-man fallacy.
Explanation:
The masked-man is a fallacy in which two people or objects are mistakenly considered to be either identical or completely different. The most common example used to explain it is the following:
I know who Joshua is.
I don't know who the masked man is.
Therefore, Joshua is not the masked man.
In the example above, Joshua and the masked man are considered different, unrelated. <u>In the situation we are analyzing here, the opposite happens. To reach the conclusion that Tamiko stole Maya's shoes, we are making the huge mistake of not considering any other possibility. Tamiko could very well have an identical-looking pair of shoes; Maya could have lent Tamiko her shoes and forgotten about it, and so on. Therefore, assuming that the shoes are the same, that they belong to Maya and have been stolen, is a result of wrong reasoning and an example of masked-man fallacy.</u>
The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis argues that the grammar, structure, and categories embodied in each language affect how its speakers see reality.
Answer:
They considered it to be a success because had it been it was a failure they would not have come together for the rational choice theory.
Explanation:
controlled Trail:" is a study in which people are allocated at random (by chance alone) to receive one of several clinical interventions".
Rational Choice theory: "Rational choice theory assumes that individuals are rational actors using rational information to try to actively maximize their advantage in any situation and therefore consistently trying to minimize their losses"