<span>Nicholas' response "Whatever" to his parent's disapproval for sleeping n the couch and doing nothing indicates role confusion.
Correct answer: C
</span>Role confusion in one of the crisis of adolescence in which <span>individuals are not sure who they are or what they like and they tend to drift from one job or relationship to another.</span>
Yes because If they don’t the Economy would be messed up
The correct answer is "Should all people late for important meetings ignore crosswalk signals?"
The concept of categorical imperative was developed by the German philosopher <u>Immanuel Kant</u>, as the central concept of his deontology, an aspect of moral philosophy that deals with duties. Kant's goal was to define a way to assess the motivations for human action at all times in life. An imperative would be any proposition that declares a particular action as necessary, based on this notion Kant divides the imperatives into two categories: categorical and hypothetical.
Those maxims that would be acceptable as a universal law, and can be considered adequate motivation for human action, would be categorical imperatives, implying an absolute and unconditional demand. This cannot be disobeyed, no matter the circumstances, being an end in itself, that is, no other purpose can justify disobedience and the categorical imperative needs no other justification. Unlike hypothetical imperatives, which have application when we want to achieve a certain end, for example, if we want to acquire knowledge, it is imperative that we learn. The hypothetical imperative is linked to the end, or the purpose, desired by the one who acts, thus facilitating the decision of what the correct action to take, is hypothetical because, once the agent has no interest in accomplishing that end, or not the necessary action is taken to carry it out, there is no obligation to follow it. In this sense, it is optional and conditioned to our inclinations.
A growth in small traditional communities.
The correct answer is: "The Voting Rights Act".
The Voting Rights Act was enacted in 1965 as a federal regulation approved in order to effectively eliminate discrimination in voting due to racial reasons. To achieve this purpouse, the states had to remove laws which they had previously approved aiming to set barriers to prevent certain social sectors, specially black citizens, from exercising their constitutional right to vote.
Voting rights had already been guaranteed by Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the US Constitution. But these legally established rights were not taking place in practice, due to the enactment of laws at the state level, such as the Jim Crow laws. Jim Crow Laws were issued to restrict access to vote by imposing requirements such as literacy tests, poll taxes or property-ownership requirements