The answer is: Vincent Ogé
<span>Vincent Ogé was a mix-raced 'free man' who was wealthy and educated, a rarity at the time for someone from mixed ethnicity.
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He made his money through plantation and was well traveled in Europe. On a trip to Paris, he saw the French revolution take place before his eyes.
However, he saw how the benefits of the revolution were only for the 'white people'.
With the help of the British he wanted to end slavery in <span>Saint-Domingue.
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</span><span>He was eventually executed by the French and he became a symbol of the slave struggle. His death caused huge riots for days.</span>
Answer:
the experiment was not associated with a prestigious institution like Yale University.
Explanation:
This is a very famous experiment in social psychology history. This experiment was conducted by Stanley Mill-gram on obedience at Yale University. This experiment focused on the person's authority obedience or personal conscience.
The experiment was conducted at Yale University. It was published in the newspaper that they need a male candidate for research conducted at Yale University. The lower level of people was following the authority figure whether they were ordered to kill innocent people.
<span>Karl Lashley failed to find evidence for the specific location of the engram's because the maze running behavior that he was studying has a complex set of related memories that are in existence in another parts of the brain.</span>
Answer: They learned how to build houses and to grow food from the local Indians.
The Indians also helped them, giving food.
The Indians taught the colonists many things, how to clean the house, how to live in that environment. But the colonists simply asked for what they wanted from the Indians, and that eventually led to an Indian attack on the colonists, who repaid by destroying the tribes.