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Brahmanism's reforms led to the development of Hinduism (known to adherents as Sanatan Dharma) while those who rejected Brahmanism, and so also Hinduism, formed their own philosophical and religious sects of which Charvaka, Jainism, and Buddhism became the most well-established
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For the Allies - Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand - it was going VERY badly. The British Army had been driven out of Europe, with the loss of all its equipment, France had been forced to surrender, British cities were suffering nightly bombing, the approaches to seaports were being blocked by ships sunk by the new, and then unsweepable, magnetic mines, U-boats were wreaking havoc on the vital Atlantic convoys. The only "bright spot" was in North Africa, where Wavell had totally defeated the Italians, but that was to be short-lived, many of his troops being diverted to Greece and lost there, and the Mediterranean Fleet having heavy losses off Crete.
The U.S. was "well out of it", and, very sensibly, was likely to remain so !
Hello. You did not provide the document to which this question refers, which makes it impossible for your question to be answered accurately. However, based on some research, I can say that scientific progress on medicine, nature and the universe occurred slowly in the Middle Ages due to the dominance of creativity. That's because, the church dominated science, politics and economics in the Middle Ages and determined what could or could not be done or believed. Based on this, the church issued certain concepts about medicine, nature and the universe that should be accepted by everyone. Any scientific advance that showed that the concepts defended by the church were wrong, was quickly fought and exterminated.
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The Internet, GPS, reliable transistors and chips: Cold War tech made possible by runaway defence spending. The space and arms race spawned a number of technologies that in turn created countless business opportunities. Even primitive computers had a profound impact on industry.
Answer:The reasons for war were many, but there were two immediate ones: America's support the ongoing struggle by Cubans and Filipinos against Spanish rule, and the mysterious explosion of the battleship U.S.S. Maine in Havana Harbor.
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