The answer is either B or D I'm not completly sure but I'm leaning more towards B.
Answer:
They were tombs to honor the royals in ancient Egypt. They were built in triangular prisms, but the insides were built like mazes so that robbers could not find the treasure that was buried alongside pharaohs and royalty.
We fear death because it is a scary thing to know that all the sudden you will now exist anymore. Also we fear the uncertainty of what happens when we die.
The general conclusion from the books and stories and in very
rare real life incidents on feral children and those brought up in confinement
is that individuals don't wind up plainly human, or at least completely human,
unless they can interface with other individuals, particularly at an early age.
The idea of feral children connects with the central issue of the connection
amongst "nature" and "nurture." The nature side argues that
it is a built in nature of any human being to become the kind of person he is
supposed to be while the Nurture side argues that it is the interaction, people
teaching us and environment etc. which makes a personality. In the case of
feral children the argument weighs more in “Nurture”<span> side that nurture plays more role in determining
the personality of a person than nature. </span>
The poster on the wall served for Coreen as a "<span>retrieval cue".
Retrieval cues are pushes or inducements (stimuli), that assistance you recover a specific memory. When we are in the formation process of new memories we take in various situations to process the information and then any of those stimulus can help us recover the memory.
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