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kykrilka [37]
3 years ago
5

Who invented Autochrome?

Arts
2 answers:
Sliva [168]3 years ago
3 0

Hello! My name is Zalgo and I am here to help you out today. There are actually 2 different Autochrome inventors. 1 is Louis Lumière and the other is Auguste Lumière. They are both brothers actually and the Autochrome was invented in 1903.

I hope that this helps! :D

"Stay Brainly and stay proud!" - Zalgo

(By the way, can you mark me as Brainliest? I'd greatly appreciate it! Thanks! X3)

telo118 [61]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

Louis Lumière and Auguste Lumière

Explanation:

They created Autochromre in the mid 1930s

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Euthyphro opens with the argument that 'Good is what is Holy'. He argues that sentient beings (people) are flawed and make bad judgments, whereas Gods are superior and possess far more wisdom than us; therefore what they command must be good. This can be refuted by pointing out that there are many different Gods, each of whom have different ideas of what is Good, thus making the Gods impossible to use as a source of morality.

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Protagoras argues that 'The Source of Morality is the Self'. His reasoning for this is a simple logical elimination. The conversation with Euthyphro has already proven that morality doesn't come from the Gods, while Protagoras believes it unlikely that morality could come from rocks and trees, because, as a system that governs the actions of humans, it makes little sense that it would originate from our surroundings. This leads him to the idea that 'Morality is up to the Individual' as the only possible remaining option; an assumption that you point out to be flawed as there is always the possibility that alternatives have been overlooked.

Protagoras goes on to declare that there is nothing upon which everyone can agree and 'Whatever an Individual Believes to be Right is Right', which he backs up by saying that people disagreed on most issues in Athenian Democracy, and that there were even those who argued that 'Those who Speak out Should be Put to Death'. This is easily rebutted as you claim that in extreme cases such as these, the values of an individual can indeed be wrong. The evidence for this is that if Free Speech was punished, Science and Philosophy would be no more and society would cease to advance; thus morality can't be determined entirely by the individual.

Protagoras is then forced to put forth that 'All Morals are Subjective', meaning that they are dependent on situation. While it is agreed that this is an interesting thought, it acknowledges that there are factors other than the individual that affect morality, undermining his entire philosophy.

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