Gerhard Lenski,is defined technology as cultural info concerning a way to use the fabric resources of the atmosphere to satisfy human wants and needs.” • Material culture is sociologically vital attributable to the role it plays in connecting people with one another and to the external atmosphere. • Advances in technology have connected additional people during a international network than was ever potential within the past. • Technological amendment will outstrip our capability to interpret and perceive the impact of such changes. Ogburn introduced the term culture lag to discuss with the amount of adjustment once the immaterial culture is troubled to adapt to new conditions of the fabric culture.
He was the first Christian ruler of Rome. This encouraged the people of the Roman Empire to become Christian. He also established a second capital in Rome (I don’t remember what it’s called)
The correct answers are: a roller coaster, a farm and an office building.
Built environment or built world<em> are human-made surroundings that provide the settings for a particular human activity.</em> They are human-made places where people live, work and recreate on a daily basis. They can be buildings, parks and transportation systems.
They are to be distinguished from a natural environment. A city park is an example of a built environment, a wild jungle is not.
<em>A roller coaster</em> is a place used for recreational purposes and man-made.
<em>A farm</em>, even if established on a wild, previously unoccupied field, is a built environment as it had been modified by humans to cater for and to adopt for their needs.
<em>An office building </em>is a place that only exists because humans built it, it is therefore, the perfect example of a built environment.
Stretching that is characterized by a "bouncing" action is called ballistic stretching.
At the time the ascetic religious system in India called Jainism, was unequal in that it favored the higher classes and granted them greater spiritual potential/reward. Buddhism became popular because it allowed even the lowly lower classes to reach Nirvana. In other words everyone could reach Nirvana, a place of perfect peace and happiness, much like the Christian idea of heaven.