B. Biographical, Life on the Mississippi is An autobiographical account of Twain's early days as a steamboat pilot on the Mississippi River.
B. Main idea. Hope it helps
Answer: This is true and concerns <em>subjectivism</em>
Explanation: Subjectivism implies that moral reasoning and judgement come from the subjective feeling of individuals, and as such it is contrary to the so-called objective judgement of what moral values are, i.e, objectivism. Subjectivists, therefore, unlike objectivists, argue that judging ethical values cannot exist independently of individuals' feelings in the given particular circumstances, particular time, and all others, current opinion, education, level of knowledge of particular theme etc. Subjectivism rejects objective moral values as an illusion. So the sense of morality and moral judgement comes from individual feelings.
Answer:
I can help :) i am a junior in highschool currently in pre-calculus so I am pretty good at math
Explanation: