Answer:
1.
Explanation:
Ethics can be defined as a systematic study of morals or what is right or wrong. The word ethic is derived from the Greek word 'ethos' which means habit or character.
It is through ethics, that humans get the prescriptions of morality and what they need to do for the benefit of their society, and what is right and fair.
<u>Ethics refrains a person from committing crimes or shows a difference between right and wrong acts; even if wrong acts are socially accepted. Such as honor killing may be accepted in society, but ethically it is a crime</u>.
Supreme Court Justices are nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate. Once they are approved, they have lifetime terms.
I agree, and believe anyone would agree, with the quote. Getting a Supreme Court Justice nominated and approved, who shares your political views, means that you will have a very powerful person in the Judicial Branch exercising power for potentially several decades. Supreme Court Justices, especially through the power of judicial review, can exercise great power over the government without having to worry about reelection and with no end to their term. This means that the president, by extension, enjoys great influence over government through his nomination of these justices.
Answer:
a) Renaissance
Explanation:
The Scientific Renaissance was a period of development of science (astronomy, mathematics, physics, chemistry, anatomy, etc.) that occurred during the Renaissance period (15th and 16th centuries). Thus, it represented a scientific revolution based on rationalism, which changed the way of seeing the world, that is, the mentality of people.
Thus, from the studies and discoveries of some scientists, this period allowed the advance of various fields of knowledge that would later inaugurate Modern Science. Note that the Renaissance were concerned with the study of nature, so that they valued reason rather than faith.
Although Leonardo da Vinci was one of the most important names in the Cultural and Artistic Renaissance, he was featured in the Scientific Renaissance alongside Nicolaus Copernicus, Andreas Vesalius and William Harvey.