Social role posits the following about social behavior:
The division of labor in society takes the form of the interaction among heterogeneous specialized positions, we call roles.
Social roles included appropriate and permitted forms of behavior and actions that recur in a group, guided by social norms, which are commonly known and hence determine the expectations
Answer:
correct answer is the capitalist class control the production of ideas
Explanation:
solution
Karl Marx ( Marxism ) is social and political and economic philosophy
it is examine effect ofcapitalism labor or productivity and the economic development
he argues for worker for revolution to overturn capitalism
and Marx believed that conflict will be ultimately lead to revolution
and so working class will overthrow capitalist class and control seize of economy
so it isbecause the capitalist class control the production of idea
Answer:TRUE
Explanation: Displacement is a change in position of an object or a person starting from where he or she started or where the object was sent from to the final point. If an object or a person returns to the same point as at the point he or she started the person's displacement is ZERO.
Distance is the term used to describe the length covered, it measures from the starting point to the finish line it is a NON ZERO VALUE. Both DISPLACEMENT AND DISTANCE COVERED ARE SCALAR QUANTITIES.
When Jesus reached the famous well at Shechem and asked a Samaritan woman for a drink, she replied full of surprise: "Jews do not associate with Samaritans” (John 4:9). In the ancient world, relations between Jews and Samaritans were indeed strained. Josephus reports a number of unpleasant events: Samaritans harass Jewish pilgrims traveling through Samaria between Galilee and Judea, Samaritans scatter human bones in the Jerusalem sanctuary, and Jews in turn burn down Samaritan villages. The very notion of “the good Samaritan” (Luke 10:25-37) only makes sense in a context in which Samaritans were viewed with suspicion and hostility by Jews in and around Jerusalem.
It is difficult to know when the enmity first arose in history—or for that matter, when Jews and Samaritans started seeing themselves (and each other) as separate communities. For at least some Jews during the Second Temple period, 2Kgs 17:24-41 may have explained Samaritan identity: they were descendants of pagan tribes settled by the Assyrians in the former <span>northern kingdom </span>of Israel, the region where most Samaritans live even today. But texts like this may not actually get us any closer to understanding the Samaritans’ historical origins.
The Samaritans, for their part, did not accept any scriptural texts beyond the Pentateuch. Scholars have known for a long time about an ancient and distinctly Samaritan version of the Pentateuch—which has been an important source for textual criticism of the Bible for centuries. In fact, a major indication for a growing Samaritan self-awareness in antiquity was the insertion of "typically Samaritan" additions into this version of the Pentateuch, such as a Decalogue commandment to build an altar on Mount Gerizim, which Samaritans viewed as the sole “place of blessing” (see also Deut 11:29, Deut 27:12). They fiercely rejected Jerusalem—which is not mentioned by name in the Pentateuch—and all Jerusalem-related traditions and institutions such as kingship and messianic eschatology.
Answer: "Up close, she is able to see the painting's details most clearly because her lens focuses light intensely onto her blind spot."
This statement above DOES NOT identify the correct structure were light is focused so we can see clearly.
Explanation: "up close" means to be closer to an image so that you can view it clearly.
The blind spot of the eye is a small part of the optic nerve, which is the visual field of each eye where there are no photoreceptors (rods or cones), and therefore images are not formed in this portion of the eye. When light falls in this portion of the eye, images won't be formed, because the photoreceptors that forms the image for the brain to interpret are not present in that portion.
For example, after being exposed to a bright light, we find it difficult to detect images immediately, because the retina has adjusted for light to fall on the blind spot.
The statement in that paragraph is wrong because her eyes can't detect any image that fall on the blind spot, so therefore the brain will not have any image to interpret, which makes it impossible for her to see clearly