In Malory's <span>Morted'Arthur, </span><span>Arthur is warned by Sir Gawain not to lead his army against Mordred the next day. If Arthur fights Mordred tomorrow, he and many men on both sides will die. Gawain tells Arthur to postpone the battle for a month to give Lancelot time to arrive. </span>
Answer:
This article presents the rare Robert Louis Stevenson case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde under the lens of disability studies as they explore the role disability plays in creating Mr. Hyde as a villain.
Explanation:
Using both historical and current understanding of disability, this article discusses how Mr. Hyde's social and cultural disagreements depend on understanding disability as "deformed." "What makes Mr. Hyde so scary" may be what makes Mr. Hyde so scary for other characters, and perhaps also for readers, is not an inherent evil, but disability itself.
You didn't give the options. However, i'll try.
To me, a stone cannot be ethical because it cannot suffer. Indeed, the capacity for suffering must be satisfied before we talk about interest in a meaningful way. For instance, nothing we could possibly do for a stone could make a difference in its welfare. It don't have interest. Whereas, we, humans have interest. Therefore we can be ethical because we are sentient beings that can be benifited or harmed. It's because we can experience pain as a result.
Hope this helps !
Photon
Answer:
A. Subtext
Explanation:
"Subtext is any content of a creative work, which is not announced explicitly (by characters or author), but is implicit, or becomes something understood by the Reader."