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lukranit [14]
3 years ago
13

5.

History
1 answer:
denis-greek [22]3 years ago
7 0
Luther thought girls were inferior to boys in every way
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PLS HELP I WILL GIVE THE FIRST GOOD ANSWER BRAINLIEST!!!
kondaur [170]

Answer:

A.  Rebuilding the Southern economy

Explanation:

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7 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Consequences of the french revolution
KATRIN_1 [288]
<h2>Answer:</h2><h2>Establishment of a republic in France.</h2><h2>Establishment of civil equality in the country (but not in the French colonies) and radical social change.</h2><h2>The Reign of Terror, during which the Revolutionary government arrested 300,000 suspects, resulting in at least 25,000 deaths.</h2><h2>The abolition of feudalism in France</h2><h2>Explanation:</h2><h2>The Revolution unified France and enhanced the power of the national state. The Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars tore down the ancient structure of Europe, hastened the advent of nationalism, and inaugurated the era of modern, total warfare.</h2>

7 0
3 years ago
what were the reasons that industrialized nations wanted to colonize other countries and territories.
Anvisha [2.4K]

Answer:

They needed natural resources from other countries.

Explanation:

Factory owners in the advanced economies required natural resources from other countries. Coal, iron, gold, silver, tin, copper, rubber, and cotton were essential to keep the factories operating. They could be taken from colonies. These same countries required markets for their manufactured products.

4 0
1 year ago
European History-Answer Quick Will Give Branliest
Stels [109]

Answer:

Charles Darwin (1809–1882)

Context for Darwin:

• Growth of scientific education and institutions

• Declining church attendance and growing secularization

• New social discourses

o Positivism and the growing prestige of science — Auguste Comte (1798–1857), Positive

Philosophy (1830–1842); science as culminating point of human intellectual and social

development.

o Materialism — mental and spiritual forces and cultural ideals were seen to be the product of

physical forces; truth found in material existence, not intuition or feeling.

Darwin’s major contributions and ideas

• On the Origin of Species (1859)

o Theory of natural selection articulated as the principle mechanism through which evolution

occurred; similar ideas were developed nearly simultaneously by Alfred R. Wallace (1823–1913).

o More living organisms came into existence than could survive; variety of species is infinite;

new biological forms emerged from older ones.

o Those species possessing unique traits that made survival possible were thought to have a

marginal advantage; only those well adapted to a specific environment survived to reproduce.

o Life constituted a competitive struggle for existence (some textbooks note Darwin borrowing

ideas for this theory from Thomas Malthus).

• The Descent of Man (1871)

o Discussed implications of natural selection for humans.

o Indicated that the human body, consciousness and religious intuition evolved to ensure the

survival of the species.

o A divine being was not needed to provide an image or model for humanity.

Consequences (challenges to traditional ways of thinking)

• Called into question biblical narrative of creation; challenged traditional Judeo-Christian view of nature

as immutable and humanity as the unique creation of God.

• Challenged Enlightenment perspectives.

o Rejected the idea that nature and society were harmonious by focusing instead on ideas of

competition and continual struggle.

o Undermined assumption that nature was tranquil and noble and humans were univers

3 0
3 years ago
State Pascal's law of liquid pressure<br>​
erica [24]

Answer:

Pascal's law says that pressure applied to an enclosed fluid will be transmitted without a change in magnitude to every point of the fluid and to the walls of the container. The pressure at any point in the fluid is equal in all directions.

Explanation:

hope it's help you

MARK ME AS BRAINLIST...

PLEASE....

6 0
2 years ago
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