Answer:
C. The rights listed are fundamental to democracy, or rule by the people.
Explanation:
Answer:
<u>Popular sovereignty</u>
Is the ideals which state that a society need to be run according to the will of the majority of the people rather than a small number of elites.
<u>Social contract</u>
An ideal which state that a society can only be run if the people and the government engaged in a social contract. The people agree to let themselves constricted under the control of government legislations. In return, the government must work to increase the well being of the people.
<u>Natural rights</u>
Natural rights are a set of universal rights that cannot be undone / violated by any legislations or government actions under any circumstances.
<u>Individual rights</u>
Individual rights are a set of rights that bestowed to the people through a specific legal system. This rights can come and go depending on who held the position within the government.
Answer:
Explanation:
The stanza is an example of extended metaphor. It is interesting that the lines are unchanged from the original song from which the melody for "Birmingham Sunday" is taken. In this metaphor, the "men in the forest" seemed awfully concerned about the "black berries." At the same time, the speaker, "with a tear" in his or her eye, asks about the "dark ships." Although this stanza can be taken many different ways, I think it is a metaphor for the fear that people feel for things they do not understand. The men in the forest are scared of things they don't know from the Blue Sea, while the speaker (who seems to be from the Blue Sea based on the question posed) is fearful of the dark ships in the forest. In this way, the extended metaphor is speaking about the fear that races have of each other and the meaninglessness of that fear. Just as the "black berries" or "dark ships" mean nothing to us, race shouldn't mean anything when evaluating the worth of a person.
The choice that shows that the stimulus and result were a meditational process with the rats in observation. The rats' brain was processing information actively, using their cognitive map.
The implication for the researchers is that in 1948, Tolman challenged the behaviorist point of view by stateing that animals, as well as people, were not passive learners as the behaviorist assumed.
Tolman believed that people acted by beliefs and attitudes, instead of only reacting to some kind of stimulus.