I believe it's number 4, but thats just me. It could be wrong <span />
This question is missing the options. I've found the complete question online. It is as follows:
In Howard Gardner's Multiple Intelligences Theory, ___ intelligence and ___ intelligence are often combined into a single type: emotional intelligence.
a) interpersonal; intrapersonal
b) intrapersonal; naturalist
c) logical-mathematical; interpersonal
d) musical; linguistic
Answer:
The correct answer is letter a) interpersonal; intrapersonal
.
Explanation:
Interpersonal intelligence is one's ability to understand and empathize with the emotions of others. Intrapersonal intelligence refers to one's ability to access their own feelings and emotions, as well as motivations, directing them toward the achievement of one's goals. The combination of the two types of intelligence forms emotional intelligence.
<h2>
Following are the factors that contributed to a lack of sea trade in North Carolina:</h2>
<u>The geography of the state made it susceptible to hurricanes:</u>
- The state of North Carolina roughly forms the centre of the north south stretch of the eastern coast of the United States. The hurricanes that form at the centre of the Atlantic Ocean and move towards the United States, inevitably hit the coast of North Carolina.
<u>The Outer Banks created a natural barrier:</u>
- A strip of slim islands running roughly parallel to the main cost of the state of North Carolina has ever proved to be a hindrance in the movement of large cargo and cruise ships.
The answer is “No one is important; they are all nothing.” Granger
is mentioning to the nonexistence of significance most persons have over time
in the outstanding arrangement of things. Each individual's life is just a few
seconds in time and space. He even adds that even pronounced men are sooner or
later forgotten.
Protagoras is a sophist mentioned by Plato in his dialogue <em>Protagoras</em>. His theory is considered the first relativist theory. It stated that everything that seems true to me, must be true. This would imply that there is no absolute truth outside of humans, a truth that "can be known." We can only know truth from what we can perceive. Therefore, truth is relative to our individual perception. This view is summarized in his famous statement:
"Man is the measure of all things: of the things that are, that they are, of the things that are not, that they are not."
On the other hand, Socrates was a proponent of a dialectic method (now called the Socratic method). It consists of trying to undermine a hypothesis by pointing out mistakes or contradictions in it. The idea is that hypothesis elimination is a way of perfecting an argument. While Socrates believed that knowledge was possible, and truth existed, the first part of getting close to it was to acknowledge one's own ignorance. It is also a method that places a lot of emphasis on coherence as a way to reach truth.