Here's link to the answer:
tinyurl.com/wpazsebu
There is no given choices. However, when I searched for a possible answer to this question, I stumbled across an article that states the following:
The Long-Term Care Homes Act
includes a Residents’ Bill of Rights. Right
number 8 states that “every resident
has the right to be afforded privacy in
treatment and in caring for his or her
personal needs”.
Resident Right 21 entitles residents the right to
meet with a spouse or other person in a room that
assures privacy.
The patient has the right to his or her privacy not only to do her personal hygiene activities but also when he or she is meeting with his or her visitors.
Thank you for posting your question here. It can be considered to be consistent with the given facts. As you know, an hypothesis, much less a theory, is never proven. It can be shown to be consistent with given observations. As new observations are collected, the given hypothesis may have to be modified.
If the celery became crisp when it was soaked in ice water, then clearly that the water has rehydrated the celery is a reasonable hypothesis. But did it have to be ice cold water? Would room temperature water work? What about boiling water?
And thus most of the time, the success of an hypothesis leads to the design of new experiments to test and expand the original hypothesis.