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natta225 [31]
4 years ago
14

What’s the Gadsden purchase?

History
2 answers:
guapka [62]4 years ago
7 0
A small strip of land that New Mexico bought from mexico
Vikentia [17]4 years ago
4 0
The Gadsden Purchase is a region of Arizona and North-western Mexico. U.S. signed a treaty on this land on the date Dec 30th, 1853- 1854. I don't remember much about this certain place but this is the basics that I remember when I studied it!
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consider audience for lincoln’s inaugural speech and for his letter to James T. Hale. What differences do you see in the tone an
Lady_Fox [76]
Bold and concerned because he sounded very bold and proud but at the same time he sounded concerned about what is going to happen.
3 0
4 years ago
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How did Standard Oil affect the U.S. economy as a whole during the Second Industrial Revolution?
Gre4nikov [31]

Answer:

D. By helping develop the country's infrastructure

Explanation:

John Rockefeller was a pioneer in horizontal integration in the American oil business. Beginning in 1865, he bought up oil wells, oil pipelines, railways and refineries and, in the end, destroyed almost all of the competitors of his Standard Oil company. By 1879, Rockefeller controlled 90% of US refining. Its pipelines directly connected Pennsylvania oil wells with refineries in New Jersey, Cleveland, Philadelphia, and Baltimore, which significantly reduced the cost of production. Standard Oil was the first trust company to centrally manage Rockefeller oil companies in each state where its refineries and pipelines were located. Trusts have become a common method of monopolizing US production and extracting superprofits from production by inflating prices in the absence of competition. Given the unprecedented scale of the Standard Oil network, the company has developed new methods for managing, financing, and organizing its business.

3 0
3 years ago
1. Why did the British people stop using wood to run their machines?
saul85 [17]

I'm not really sure but i think it might be because they got more modern technology.

4 0
3 years ago
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What made the middle colonies different from New England and the southern colonies?
kotegsom [21]
<span>b. The large plantations had many enslaved workers.</span>
7 0
4 years ago
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Explain how the Scientific revolution relates to the increasing secularization of the nineteenth century.
vovikov84 [41]

Answer:

this is long sorry.

Explanation:

The Scientific Revolution was initially a movement that buttressed Christianity. Only in the late 19th century did science become a secularizing force.

It’s often claimed that empirical validation replaced religious authority. That’s a facile assumption but false.

In fact, Boyle and Newton were fervent Christians who believed that modern science provided endless and compelling evidence of God’s Design and existence. Indeed, this was the chief value of science. This attitude prevailed throughout the eighteenth century. Christianity gained a new modern justification in science.

The chief secularizers were not scientists, but Enlightenment philosophers. Their beliefs would become enshrined in the constitutions that would secularize society. The most important of them - Locke, Rousseau and Voltaire - were Christians. Their disgust with religious wars and religious tyranny, and their respect for the dignity of independent thought, drove them to challenge Christian authoritarianism. The Scientific Revolution played little role here.

A few secularists such as d’Holbach and La Mettrie were more clearly driven by scientific views, namely, atomism, but their views had marginal influence on secularism. Moreover, their atheistic materialism has a lineage separate from the Scientific Revolution. It encompasses Spinoza, the School of Padua (philosophers such as Zabarella and Pomponazzi), and the 14th century rediscovery of Lucretius, and it was born from philosophical considerations, not by scientific method. By contrast, whenever materialism intersected the Scientific Revolution, natural philosophers, such as Descartes, Gassendi, and Malebranche endeavored as dutiful Christians to re-infuse that materialism with God.

It wasn’t until the 19th century that science switched sides and became the ally of secularization. Two factors prevailed: Scientific materialism became a dominant viewpoint openly hostile to religion (signaled by Feuerbach in Germany and George Combe in England); and the theory of evolution finally retired science from confirming Design. The intricate workings of Nature no longer attested God’s hand, but were understood as having evolved over geologic time.

But this was a recent development. The modern stand-off between science and religion, and stories like Galileo’s struggle with the Church, lead us to imagine that science was always a secularizing force opposed to Christianity, but the opposite was true.

i hope this will help you with anything :)

7 0
3 years ago
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