Answer:
If you copy and paste the title of the resource in the explanation below, it'll provide you with multiple links. The reliable and trustworthy one is medium dot com where I found examples of how bad faith connects with what Sartre is talking about.
Explanation:
Resource Used:
Jean Paul Sartre: The Concept of Bad Faith and its Role in Ethical Analysis
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The correct answer is <em>Malala was right about the edict and what it meant</em> AND<em> She was a global symbol of girls’ rights but also just a kid.</em>
Please provide me with the paragraph to read so I can properly answer this question
Based on the narrator's description, the reader can infer he thinks that:
C. People's beliefs influence what they see.
- "Invisible Man" by Ralph Ellison develops the themes of racism and black identity.
- The narrator begins by saying <u>people cannot see him</u>. They can see anything else, even figments of their imagination, but not him.
- The reason for that is not that people hallucinate. It is their beliefs which are blinding them.
- The narrator is a black man. The color of his skin is what makes him invisible.
- But it shouldn't be. It is because of people's prejudice toward him that he feels invisible.
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