Answer:
stereotype
Explanation:
Blake has a stereotype for women. A stereotype is an untrue belief or rushed assumption about a group of people based on particular experiences or "surface" experiences with one or two members of the group. In social psychology, it is seen as over generalized belief about a particular group. People who have stereotypes have expectations about a group based on what they have heard or experienced with a member of the group. Expectations could be personality, preferences, beliefs etc. In the example Blake has a stereotype because he believes all women(group) are quiet and don't like to speak up since his mother and sister don't like to speak up
First, which of the numbers are bigger than 4,735?
<span>b. 4,758
c. 4,832
d. 4,915
out of those, which ones are smaller than 4,820 (I assume here you forgot a < symbol there)?
only this one:
</span>
<span><span>b. 4,758
so that's the correct asnwer!</span>
</span>
An increase of 75 percent on Juvenile arrests for violent crimes occurred between 1985 and 1994. Murder arrest <span>committed by young people increased between the years 1987 and 1993. Between 1993 and 2000, there was a decline in juvenile arrests. The </span>juvenile<span> violent crime arrest was at its lowest in 2000 since 1985.</span><span> </span>
<span>ART BY THOMAS POROSTOCKY</span>PRO: RESEARCH ON GENE EDITING IN HUMANS MUST CONTINUE
By John Harris
<span>John Harris is professor emeritus in science ethics at University of Manchester, U.K., and the author of How to be Good, Oxford University Press 2016.</span>
In February of this year, the Human Fertilization and Embryology Authority in the United Kingdom approved a request by the Francis Crick Institute in London to modify human embryos using the new gene editing technique CRISPR-Cas9. This is the second time human embryos have been employed in such research, and the first time their use has been sanctioned by a national regulatory authority. The scientists at the Institute hope to cast light on early embryo development—work which may eventually lead to safer and more successful fertility treatments.
The embryos, provided by patients undergoing in vitro fertilization, will not be allowed to develop beyond seven days. But in theory—and eventually in practice—CRISPR could be used to modify disease-causing genes in embryos brought to term, removing the faulty script from the genetic code of that person’s future descendants as well. Proponents of such “human germline editing” argue that it could potentially decrease, or even eliminate, the incidence of many serious genetic diseases, reducing human suffering worldwide. Opponents say that modifying human embryos is dangerous and unnatural, and does not take into account the consent of future generations.
Answer:
choose new routes to the west
Explanation:
they did not want to get lost and they used the way they knew how