Answer:
The Code of Hammurabi was one of the first legislative compilations of the civilized world, coming from Mesopotamia around the year 1700 BC.
This Code laid the foundations of social coexistence in Mesopotamian cities, basing its legislation on the Talion Law, by which all action required a consequence of a similar or identical nature to the contrary. Thus, there was the first documented case of retributive justice, in which people received consequences according to the actions they took.
This principle, synthesized in the phrase "an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth", laid the foundations of what we now know as justice, since it gave each action a logical result. Thus, today governments apply a commutative and corrective justice evolved from this ancient way of imparting justice, but continuing with the conception that every action has a necessary consequence.
Answer:
Players, scores, rules, outcomes
Answer: C. A mass exodus by white and black South Carolinians from the state to look for job opportunities elsewhere
Explanation:
The Great Depression of the late 1920s and early 1930s caused a lot of hardships for South Carolinians. A lot of problems befell them at that period such as the low prices of agricultural goods, the high taxes that they had to pay and the collapse of agriculture altogether from crop destruction and mortgage foreclosures on farms.
In response, a lot of people left South Carolina including both white and blacks to seek greener pastures. They did not head to the same place however, with whites heading south and west and the blacks heading North.
Roma was facing a political crisis, many senators and politicians were fighting to see who gains power of Rome and Octavian the son of Caesar become the sole ruler of Rome and saved everyone from more bloodshed. (from the civil war)
Answer:
True
Explanation:
During the late 1950s and early 1960s, Werner Arber and several others extended the work of an earlier Nobel laureate, Salvador Luria, who observed that bacteriophages (viruses that infect bacteria) not only induce hereditary mutations in their bacterial hosts but at the same time undergo hereditary mutations themselves. Werner Arber’s research was concentrated on the action of protective enzymes present in the bacteria, which modify the DNA of the infecting virus e.g., the restriction enzyme, so-called for its ability to restrict the growth of the bacteriophage by cutting the molecule of its DNA to pieces.