An interest group pressures politicians to do what someone pays the interest group t odo. One is the use of analysts to shove data in their faces. Another is the protest. A last one is the radicals.
They are all recruited using feminist and SJW tactics.
Answer:
The question that relates to the hard problem of consciousness is:
D) Do both women perceive the air conditioning in the same way?
Explanation:
Consciousness can be defined as our perception of our own mental processes. <u>The hard problem of consciousness is related to why or how we are able to perceive an experience form a first-person perspective, how we are able to "feel like" something. In the case we are analyzing here, the hard problem of consciousness relates to the perception each woman has of the air conditioning. Even though they have both come from outside the building, from the same heat, into the building, to the same colder temperature, do they have the same perception of it? </u>Or are their perceptions different because they are different people?
1. The Northern colonies were a refuge for religious dissenters, many of whom immigrated in families. Fewer families migrated to the Southern colonies because the South attracted people who were seeking economic prosperity.
2. Many people came to the Southern colonies from England because of limited opportunities in the old country. The English countryside was nearly fully occupied by farmers, but the American South had vast expanses of uninhabited, uncultivated land. Immigrants also came from Germany, Scotland and Ireland, and some of these people moved inland, away from the English, especially if they could not obtain fertile land near the coast. These inland Southern colonists faced hardship living in Indian country and wilderness.
3. Colonists in the Southern colonies experienced epidemics of yellow fever and malaria, which shortened life <span>expectancies</span>. These disease outbreaks did not plague the North as much. Life expectancy was even shorter for slaves abducted from Africa or other places. On some of the harsher plantations, slave life expectancy was only seven to nine years.