D. He looked to the Classical past for truth
While Rousseau did study the past in his pursuit of truth, he looked at man in his natural state (i.e pre-civilization). Rousseau's Discourse on Inequality is his foray into the evolution of man from his natural state into what the man of Rousseau's time. Rousseau described uncivilized man as a "noble savage". Critics argue that Rousseau was idealizing man in an uncivilized state and advocating for a return to this. What he likely meant was that man is naturally moral (driven by the well- balanced instincts of piety and survival) and that it is society that corrupts man. Classical philosophy and art is part of the society that Rousseau criticizes. In his Discourse on the Arts and Sciences he provides the link between the fall of the Roman empire and the peak of the Roman arts as an example of the detrimental effect arts (and that which was celebrated during the classical Greek and Roman periods as the best kind of human activity) has on man's natural sense of decency and morality.
Answer:
b
Explanation:
because i did take the same question from my class as well
There are two macro factors that contribute to the globalization. The first one can be defined as 'free trade' or the flow of capital, goods and services across the globe and it has been present since the 1950s. The second, and the more recent one, is the rapid development of technology.
ANSWER:
sociocultural-graded influences
STEP-BY-STEP EXPLANATION:
when social and cultural factors affect an individual at a particular time and include such variable as ethnicity, social class, and subcultural membership, these factors are called sociocultural-graded influences