assuming that this is the sentence you're referring to :
Sentence 1: As I turned onto Bryce Road, I saw the Parkers’ cat crouched under a tree, hissing at something on the ground.
Sentence 2: I decided to ride my skateboard to school this morning.
Sentence 3: I shooed the cat away and called my older stepbrother, a veterinarian, because he would know just how to help them.
Sentence 4: Approaching the cat, I noticed that a nest full of tiny birds was on the ground; it must have fallen from a branch.
The most logical way to sequence these into logical narratives would be :
Sentence 2 , Sentence 1, Sentence 4, sentence 3
<span>A. try to be tolerant, even of those we wouldn't choose as friends.</span>
Answer:
Image result for Use the rules of inference and replacement to construct a proof.. philosophy: college
The rules of inference (also known as inference rules) are a logical form or guide consisting of premises (or hypotheses) and draws a conclusion. A valid argument is when the conclusion is true whenever all the beliefs are true, and an invalid argument is called a fallacy as noted by Monroe Community College.