Answer:
History? I can help! Well I can try to help but first of all: elimination. Get rid of D and C, which leaves you with B and A. A and B are good answer choices but if I we're you I'd probably chose B if it's in the books (or ebooks) but if it's not A is your answer.
Answer:
D.
Explanation:
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was the 32nd President of the United States. He successfully led America through the Great Depression and World War II. Franklin was diagnosed with infantile paralysis in 1921 when he was 39 years old.
Despite being physically crippled, he reinforced America with confidence and strength.
The historian James Tobin, in his interview, once said that Roosevelt, though was crippled but this disability helped him to gain strength and confidence.<u> His struggle to overcome his affliction was the most important contribution in the development of his confidence and strength</u>.
So, the correct answer is option D.
Affirmative action is designed to positively influence the person who is receiving this type of aciton. The basic idea behind this type of action is that if we're providing affirmative action towards someone then that someone will want to do that action more often.
21. It not only functioned as a plea for equality and justice; it also helped pave the way for both the ratification of the Twenty-fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. This March was so significant that it help pass this pending major civil rights legislation.
22. Not all African-Americans were with the movement. Malcom x was not only opposed but called it “Farce on Washington.”
23. The highlight of that day was final speech given by Dr.Martin Luther King Jr. title “I have a dream” where he addressed to call to end racism.
24. The civil rights act on 1964 was passed and ongoing demonstrations and violence continued to pressure political leaders to act.
I hope that helps!
Answer:
The Categorical Imperative, was the philosophical view of moral actions and behavior in people, according to Immanuel Kant, its creator. Basically, this philosophy states that there are universal truths that cannot be altered, or changed, by absolutely anything: not by culture, not by genetics, not by learning, and much less by the beliefs of the majority. A truth is what it is, and it must be obeyed as the utmost "right", not merely what is "good".
In contrast to Kant´s philosophy, which was born from Kant´s displeasure with how the society of his time behaved, it was hypothetical imperatives that would dictate how people needed to behave to be considered moral. These hypothetical imperatives were truths that were dependent on certain circumstances, and on empirical knowledge, and therefore, were bound to change given certain conditions. This was something that Kant could not tolerate and thus fed his need to create his Categorical Imperative philosophy.
However, even during his own time Kant´s philosophy was criticized and questioned. And one person who did that was Benjamin Constant, who proposed the idea of the Inquiring Murdered. He said that if Kant´s philosophy of moral behavior was absolute, then when a murdered asked a question, he should be given the TRUTH, because that woud be what was universally held as morally right. But if that truth led to the murderer finding his victim, then, what did the philosophy told people was right to do? This questioning showed even Kant that there were instances in which due to the nature of the situation, lying would not be held as wrong, but rather, as the correct measure to act morally.