Answer: Nolan grins widely and pumps his fist in the air after winning a chess tournament, even though he is blind and has never seen what a winner's body language looks like.
Explanation: one aspect of emotion is physiological response. Usually this physiological responses are not voluntary because we dont consciously think about it. The human automic nervous system controls this involuntary actions. The amygdala is involved in accessing and interpreting situations to determine the appropriate emotions and connects this interpretations to the region of the brain responsible for stimulating actions. The case of Nolan simply proves that emotion has a biological basis because his actions were involuntary and were not learnt as he his blink and does not visibly know how others react when they win.
Answer:
El budismo había asestado un duro golpe a la fe brahmínica. Amenazado con la extinción, el hinduismo comenzó a reorganizarse. Ahora se intentó abandonar el complejo sistema de ritos y rituales y hacer que el hinduismo fuera simple y atractivo. Los hindúes incluso llegaron a aceptar al Buda como una encarnación hindú y aceptaron el principio de la no violencia. Esto ayudó a revivir el hinduismo y lo hizo popular nuevamente. Esto le quitó la fragancia a la flor del budismo. El declive del budismo se volvió inevitable.
Explanation:
THIS IS IN ENGLISH
Buddhism had dealt a heavy blow to Brahminical faith. Threatened with extinction, Hinduism started to re-organize itself. Attempts were now made to give up the complex system of rites and rituals and make Hinduism simple and attractive. The Hindus even came to accept the Buddha as a Hindu incarnation and accepted the principle of non-violence. This helped revive Hinduism and made it popular again. This took away the fragrance out of the flower of Buddhism. The decline of Buddhism became inevitable.
Answer:
Fourthly, the second battle of Tarain paved the way for further military conquests in India by the Muslims. Between 1192 and 1206 the Turkish rule had extended over the Gangetic plains of Bihar and Bengal. Fifthly, the battle paved the way for foundation of the Muslim rule in India.
Explanation: