The U.S. Constitution refers to the Constitution of the whole country, not the individual states, so the second option can't be the right one. Also, the power is limited and there is a way to have amendments, so the right answer is this one:
<span>It explains the organization of the federal government</span>
Urbanization
Urbanization refers to the phenomenon where individuals move to cities or towns for various reasons including:
a. More job opportunities
b. More facilities- health, shopping, entertainment, etc.
c. Better technology
Urbanization is increasingly commonly worldwide, in both developed and developing countries. While its benefits include more social growth, modernization and opportunities, urbanization can also lead problems such as: pollution, environmental issues, traffic and in some cases overpopulated cities.
Answer:
Stimulus generalization
Explanation:
Stimulus generalizationis is when a subject responds to a stimulus or a group of stimuli similar but not identical to the original situation. For example the dog salivating at a slightly higher or lower pitch not only to the exact tone is a stimulus that is similar but not the original. The animal responds to the similar stimulus in the same way it would to the conditioned stimulus.
Answer:
D
Explanation:
Erick Erickson was a neo-Freudian. he was a social cognitive psychologist who took Freud's controversial theory on psycho-sexual stages theory. He emphasized that psycho-sexual stages such as ego make a positive contribution to development by mastering attitude, ideas, and skills at each stage of development. This mastery helps the children to grow successful, contributing members of society. During each stage of psycho-social theory stages, there are psycho-sexual conflicts that must be successfully overcome for a child to develop into a healthy and well adjusted young adult. If the failure occurs to these mastery leads to inadequacy in life or crisis in adulthood.
Answer: He was a a German philosopher, essayist, and cultural critic.
Explanation: He tries to unmask the motives that underlie traditional Western religion, morality, and philosophy deeply affected generations of theologians, philosophers, psychologists, poets, novelists, and playwrights.