I believe the correct answer is: “…the two pilgrims successfully resist Flatterer, who tries to trap them with a net, and Atheist, who tries to convince them that the Celestial City does not exist.”
In this excerpt from “Pilgrim's Progress” (1678), a Christian allegory written by John Bunyan, specific characters that serve as an allegory for distractions that one must resist to live a life of faith are Flatterer and Atheist which try to divert tempt Christian and Hopeful from the proper path. Therefore, the quotation that best develops this idea is:
“…the two pilgrims successfully resist Flatterer, who tries to trap them with a net, and Atheist, who tries to convince them that the Celestial City does not exist.”
P.S. Note that if it wasn't plural, the main distraction would be Apollyon, a form of Satan, as the Satan was tempting Christ the most in the desert.
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I'm sorry I need more information to answer this!!!
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- The main themes in "The Veldt" are reality versus fantasy, technology, and consumerism. Realty versus fantasy: Though the environments the nursery recreates are not meant to be real in a tangible sense, the vivid sensory experiences enable violent impulses to take shape.
Explanation:
- Veldt” portrays a futuristic society in which things, especially consumer goods, have gained a life of their own. In the name of convenience and contentment, technology fulfills people's every need, reducing humans to passive beings who only eat, breathe, and sleep.
- What is the meaning of the phrase “'Children are carpets, they should be stepped on occasionally'” (Paragraph 131)? Parents should step on their children. Children should listen to their parents. Parents should discipline their children. ... They love it in the way that they should love their parents
The Veldt," Bradbury may have used the virtual lions to kill the parents to emphasize the serious dangers of technology. In much of Ray Bradbury's science fiction, there is an underlying distrust of technology.
was a theoretical physicist who published the special and general theories of relativity and contributed in other areas of physics. He won the Nobel Prize in physics for his explanation of the photoelectric effect.
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brown v. board of education