Answer:
By reading "Never just pictures" we were able to find some factors that cause eating disorders. According to the author, these factors are:
- Valorization of super-thin bodies by the media.
- Use of very thin models as a beauty standard.
- Curse swearing that has more voluptuous bodies and is out of the standard of thinness.
- The fashion industry.
Explanation:
According to Susan Bordo, in "Never just pictures" the media is the biggest factor causing eating disorders. This is because it is the media that sets the standard of beauty when using extremely thin models, as examples of beauty and attractiveness. In addition, media outlets are very critical of actresses who present themselves with fatter bodies, harassing them in articles and TV shows. The fashion industry also plays a role in these disorders, determining what an ideal body is, a body that will look beautiful in any outfit. This causes people, especially women, to seek at all times to reach a dangerous level of thinness. These people, desperate to achieve this standard of beauty, are unable to see themselves thin, even if they are already skeletal and therefore develop eating disorders.
Answer:
Explanation:
Antimicrobials are probably one of the most successful forms of chemotherapy in the history of medicine. It is not necessary to reiterate here how many lives they have saved and how significantly they have contributed to the control of infectious diseases that were the leading causes of human morbidity and mortality for most of human existence. Contrary to the common belief that the exposure to antibiotics is confined to the modern “antibiotic era,” research has revealed that this is not the case. The traces of tetracycline, for example, have been found in human skeletal remains from ancient Sudanese Nubia dating back to 350–550 CE (Bassett et al., 1980; Nelson et al., 2010). The distribution of tetracycline in bones is only explicable after exposure to tetracycline-containing materials in the diet of these ancient people. Another example of ancient antibiotic exposure is from a histological study of samples taken from the femoral midshafts of the late Roman period skeletons from the Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt (Cook et al., 1989). These samples showed discrete fluorochrome labeling consistent with the presence of tetracycline in the diet at that time (Cook et al., 1989). The postulated intake of tetracycline in these populations possibly had a protective effect because the rate of infectious diseases documented in the Sudanese Nubian population was low, and no traces of bone infection were detected in the samples from the Dakhleh Oasis (Armelagos, 1969; Cook et al., 1989).
I'd say D. expert power because expert power is when an employee ( or in your case the teacher) has a high set of knowledge/skills that other employees do not posses. Which by the information above about this teacher's PhD and thier experience, I assume that this teacher must have expert power.