Answer:
<u>The Cornell Notes system.</u>
Explanation:
<u>The Cornell Notes system</u>/Cornell note-taking system/Cornell method/Cornell way is a note-taking system devised in the 1950s by Walter Pauk, <em>an education professor at Cornell University</em>. Pauk advocated its use in his best-selling book <em>How to Study in College.</em>
Answer:
schizotypal personality disorder.
Explanation:
In simple words, Schizotypal personality syndrome affects social misfits who tend to maintain a safe separation from individuals and feel insecure in interactions. They have a small or flat spectrum of feelings and occasionally display strange expression or actions. This trend emerges in young adulthood which persists throughout one's life.
Thus, from the above we can conclude that the correct answer is schizotypal personality disorder.
According to Maslow's hierarchy of needs, people who engage in selfless, altruistic behavior may have reached self-actualization.
According to Maslow's hierarchy of needs, people who already reach this stage have already discovered the true purpose their lives, which influence them to that selfless and altruistic behavior.
I do agree with Chillingworth, it is definitely better not to keep a guilty secret because, in my personal opinion, keeping this kind of secrets is like swallowing a slow acting poison. This guilty secrets, when kept, make us behave in a way that might cause harm to others or to ourselves; in other words, keeping this kind of secrets allows the harmful, hurtful behavior, we are keeping within the secret, to continue.
If you decide to keep this kind of secrets, it immediately creates a barrier between you and the person who told you the secret, and eventually it would also create a barrier with the person that might be hurt by knowing what you have been told. It is actually better and almost a life rule, to live your life without having any secrets to keep at all and, also, to not do anything you can not tell the people you care the most or that later, as time passes by, you will regret.