Answer:
the hindsight bias
Explanation:
Hindsight bias
This is simply known as the probability/tendency to believe after getting you know or learned all outcome, that one would have known or seen it as "I knew it all along".
Overconfidence together with hindsight bias, can cause intuition overestimation.
It is also the ability to believe(know) after learning an outcome, that one would have known it before.
Answer:
The French soldiers were not prepared to fight against guerrilla forces.
Explanation:
- It will soon be shown that the French army, trained in conventional warfare, was not ready for confrontation with easily moving guerrilla forces.
- This was especially noticeable in the north of the country where the positions of the colonial army were scattered.
- The Vietminh practiced concentrated force attacks on French positions, thus destroying position by position.
- In the event that Vietminh aid was sent to the attacked forces, it would often find out very quickly, and in most cases would be ambushed to kill thousands of colonial soldiers. In October 1950, only one such ambush killed 6,000 colonial soldiers.
Answer:
The correct answer is b: in doubt until the great Union victories in the Battles of Atlanta and Mobile Bay
Explanation:
President Lincoln (1809-1865) was re-elected in the Election of 1864 mostly because of the great <em>Union</em> victories in the Battles of Atlanta and Mobile Bay. These two were significant blows to the <em>Confederacy</em>, and until those victories, Lincoln winning the election had been much in doubt. One of the reasons was that the <em>Civil War</em> was taking longer than expected to come to an end - but the spirit and morale in the North were lifted due to the Union victory in the two battles. This was a crucial aspect that secured the <em>re-election</em> of President Lincoln, who, on <em>November 8</em>, defeated George McClellan (1826-1885), his <em>Democratic competitor</em>, once a Union general.
This 1864 presidential election was only held only for those states which had not separated themselves from the <em>Union</em>.
Answer: Plessy v. Ferguson was important because it essentially established the constitutionality of racial segregation. As a controlling legal precedent, it prevented constitutional challenges to racial segregation for more than half a century until it was finally overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in Brownv.
Explanation: