<span>The answer is Peter Berger's concept of debunking. It means to expose the falseness. Peter Berger is a author of Social Construction. Humanity is the main one in the sociology and it place the discipline close to the humanities like literature, history and philosophy etc. Based on humanity the unmasking assumptions are debunking.</span>
I believe the answer is: <span>arbitrary inference
</span><span>arbitrary inference refers to the process of creating a conclusion without sufficient evidences to back it up.
We can see this arbitary interference by observing marta's thought that believe Demerio is </span><span>older and losing my physical abilities without even seeing him doing the task.</span>
Answer:
Explanation:
Haha, teacher has a sense of humor?!
I would think this is an answer that will be different for each student!
I think it's five distinct paths. I could be wrong but it's an educated guess.
Yes, there were huge plagues in Ancient Rome that caused all kind of devastation.....
One of the FIRST of the BIG plagues was the Antonine Plague, 165-180 AD, also known as the Plague of Galen, an ancient pandemic, whether of smallpox or measles, they are not sure, claimed the lives of TWO Roman emperors.
The disease broke out again 9 years later and caused up to 2,000 deaths a DAY at Rome, one quarter of those infected.
Total deaths have been estimated at five million.
Disease killed as much as one-third of the population in some areas, and decimated the Roman army.
This thing traveled far too, up into Gaul, all over Roman Europe.
The Plague of Justinian may have been the first instance of bubonic plague and was one of the causes of the Fall of the Roman Empire.
Smaller but no less deadlier plagues played havoc throughout the Roman Empire over many years.
Diseases from unkept Roman plumbing with the ground water mixing in with rain water.