Answer:
They may be mentally ill and therefore unable to apply morality in a way that is generally accepted. They may not understand that what they are doing is bad - or there definition of good and bad does not follow the accepted norm.
They may be religious and follow rules or instructions that contradict the golden rule. As Steven Weinberg said “With or without religion, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil - that takes religion.”.
They may be acting under some duress. For example they may be forced to do something bad with the threat of something bad happening to them if they do not. A similar effect can occur when people are strongly indoctrinated with some idea - for example the effect that the Nazis had on the people of Germany.
I am sure there are more reasons I could think of if I thought about it for long enough. The point being that people do bad things for all sorts of reasons.
Explanation:
General Nathanael Greene made this observation
The answer is 3, nervousness. It is quite easy to figure out if you have experienced those feelings yourself, and Lara could be seen as "shy" from a third-person perspective based on her quiet voice and inability to look the teacher in the eye.
One characteristic of Enlightenment that is seen in this excerpt is that people should be guided by the reason and not irrational fears, however serious they may seem to be. The protagonist/author of the diary seems to be the only cool-headed person in this terrible situation. Everybody else is freaking out, running about and screaming. He notices multiple times that nobody is making any effort to actually quench the fire. He is the one who goes to warn the king and suggests that houses should be pulled down. There is one very interesting remark about Lord Mayor, who is in a panic just like everyone else: "To the King's message he cried, like a fainting woman..." Misogyny aside, this comment shows the speaker's manly, reasonable, commendable attitude. He is an active person who does something to undo the damage, and not just a passive observer or a coward who runs away in panic.
A diary entry was a fitting form during the Enlightenment period because that was the first time that the words and opinions of a more or less ordinary person were deemed important. A diary has this risk of being a subjective collection of personal impressions. But Pepys' diary pretends to be highly objective because its author sees himself as a reasonable man, important in his own right, competent enough to keep a diary and record some important things that happen around him, to other ordinary people.
Answer:
Multiple choice, T/F, and matching tests
Explanation:
Multiple choice questions contain two parts: the question or problem itself, and a set of possible answers. One of those options is the best answer to the question, while other options serve as distractors and are incorrect. These questions measure how well the test takers are able to recall the information they've learned.
In true or false questions, the test takers have to determine whether the given statement is true or false. These questions determine the taker's ability to identify the authenticity of various types of statement, such as facts, statistics, relationships, generalizations, principles, etc.
A matching question consists of two lists of related words, phrases, pictures, or symbols. Each option from one list is paired with at least one option from the other list. These questions measure the test taker's ability to connect words, complete sentences, or pair words with their definition.