The way that stasis questions can help you in an argument is that it would help you build common ground with your audience so that the argument is more persuasive.
<h3>What are statis questions?</h3>
These are questions that are used in arguments to show that there are issues that are being contested or questions that must first be answered for the argument to continue.
The central issues would first be identified and then they would be resolved using arguments.
Read more on stasis questions here: brainly.com/question/1253084
Life and death, all part of an ecosystem
I cant narrow the topic much more because then it would make no sense
I read Ted Chiang’s excerpt “EXHALATION” and the correct answer would be D, <u><em>“IT CREATES A FEELING OF HOPE AND PERSONAL REFLECTION”.</em></u> The whole excerpt is talking about life in a scientific way, it’s trying to make the reader to have a vision about some scientific facts about our organism.
The excerpt states 2 theories. The first one is about our memories and that the things that we forget are indeed gone forever and there is nothing we can do to have them back. And the second one is about contrasting reality vs science.
The correct answer is 4: The speaker implores God to use violence to break him so that he can be made new.
In this Holy Poem 14, “Batter my Heart”, by John Donne, the poet is addressing God directly and he is implying that the usual way God enters into everybody’s life is not enough for the poet. The poet does not need gentle manners: to knock, to shine, to mend.
On the other hand, in order to let God get into his life, he needs a tough hand: to force, to brake, to blow and burn. This is likely because the poet might consider his soul and heart are too corrupt for such gentle ways.
The paradox, or apparently contradictory idea, here is to attach God such a violent behavior.