<span>Friar Laurence's advice to Juliet after Romeo's banishmenthope it helps </span>
So there’s this moment in the play Julius Caesar where one Roman nobelman says to another, “The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars but in ourselves, that we are underlings.” And in the context of the play, that quotation makes perfect sense—these two guys did not suffer some unjust destiny; they made decisions that led them to their fates.<span>
However, that quote has since been decontextualized over and over and used universally as a way of saying that the fault is not in the stars (i.e., fate/luck/whatever) but in individual people.</span>
<span>The idea is that this
hopelessness stops people from acting, so Goodall decided to present some
success stories, in hopes that people will see a difference can still be made
for a lot of species that appear to be in a dire situation.<span> </span></span>
In my opinion I think it's A it could be C but when you see someone around you physically see but you wouldn't call them strangers if you physically resemble and know the person. In answer a it says "emotionally disconnected" which can mean strangers but it can be temporary.