What does the narrator's response to the setting reveal about his character? His desire to follow society's rules is greater than his own ideas. His desire to explore is greater than his fear of where he is going. ... He is afraid that his fear will eventually prevent him from learning.
It's certainly sensory. And it's figurative too. I think I'd pick figurative because the central piece of language is a simile. That's pretty good use of language when you compare the bobbing heads of flowers to helmeted soldiers.
Best Answer:<span> </span><span>Yes there is a strong relationship between Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics and what you call the "moral theory" of St. Thomas (Aquinas). They both agree that happiness is the ultimate good, or desired "end" (goal; end cause; a.k.a. "telos") of human beings. But as a moral dogmatic theologian, Aquinas goes beyond what Aristotle called "intellectual and moral virtue", as the most desireable "end" or goal for human beings, which makes humans most happy, to "speculating" on God's goodness, beauty and other attributes in eternity as the ultimate good (producing human happiness) for humans in a "beatific"/happy afterlife --- commonly known as seeing God in heaven.
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Answer is that’s to much reading
Answer:
How does the author of "The Lady, or the Tiger?" show the moral of the story? What lets you know that this is the moral? The moral is that a selfless person would put the man's life before her own happiness. The author says the princess is jealous of the woman her lover would marry.
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