Answer:
In Chapter 1 of To Kill a Mockingbird, Scout is reminiscing about Jem's broken arm, an event that happens later in the story. When she considers how the chain of events surrounding his broken arm began, Scout blames the Ewells. However, Jem believes that Dill is the reason it all began. Dill gives them "the idea of making Boo Radley come out."
Dill, otherwise known as Charles Baker Harris, stays with his Aunt Rachel in Maycomb County during the summer. Once Dill "had been studied and found acceptable," he and the Finch children spend a great deal of time together. According to Scout, "The Radley place fascinated Dill." It is in this way that Dill contributes to the plot development. Before Dill, Scout and Jem are aware of the rumors and superstitions regarding Boo Radley, but Dill is the one that dares Jem to touch the house. After Jem completes the dare, Scout recalls seeing a shutter move in the house. Just as the children are interested in Boo, he becomes interested in them as well.
Explanation:
Answer: The correct option is B:
Details that the narrator states directly in the text.
The author uses the third person to narrate the story, and gives <u>specific details explicitly</u>, explaining all the thoughts, feelings and actions that take place in the story directly. Explicit means that the reader does not have to infer or imagine the things that happen in the story because all actions are described in detail and they are certain, there are not mysteries about what must have happened because the narrator knows all the events and explains it fully in the story.
I may be a little late, but the answers are A and D.
Answer:
Hardin's metaphor describes a lifeboat bearing 50 people, with room for ten more. The lifeboat is in an ocean surrounded by a hundred swimmers. The "ethics" of the situation stem from the dilemma of whether (and under what circumstances) swimmers should be taken aboard the lifeboat.
Hardin compared the lifeboat metaphor to the Spaceship Earth model of resource distribution, which he criticizes by asserting that a spaceship would be directed by a single leader – a captain – which the Earth lacks. Hardin asserts that the spaceship model leads to the tragedy of the commons. In contrast, the lifeboat metaphor presents individual lifeboats as rich nations and the swimmers as poor nations.
Explanation: