Answer and Explanation:
here are a few sentences i found:
Answer:
Letter to a friend.
Explanation:
674, Boulevard Appartments,
New York City, US
Dear Alice,
How are you doing? I hope this letter finds you in good health. I am doing good but facing some problems at school.
You know that our school is regarded as the best and top-rated schools in our city, but there are some practices that I don't like. For instance, there is no practicality in our studies. All we are imparted with is theoretical knowledge. No practical learning skills are being practiced in this school. The second problem is that there is a load of subjects to study. I mean, first, they already teach us only theory, then, they don't give us any choice in subjects, we have to study a lot of subjects. And, lastly, we hardly get any time to freshen our minds. We seldom get sports periods in a week. Many times our sports periods are also taken up by our subject teachers as a substitute.
I am thinking to send an email to our board members because it is really stressing out all students. Such tireless teaching is making our brain process slow. What do you say about this? I hope to listen from you soon.
With love,
Tina
New York should be correct :)
The answer is C: most societies do not allow the level of freedom necessary to achieve enlightenment.
Kant argues in the brief but extremely important essay, <em>What is Enlightenment?, </em>that society, before the age of Enlightenment, which Kant precisely defines in this essay, has behaved like a minor in as much as a child cannot think for himself but rather is given the guidelines for his behavior. Kant then claims that it is time for society, and everyone in it, to become an adult and dare think for one´s self, imposing the guidelines for thought and action based on one´s own transcendental discovery of the limits of thought, what can be thought, and what that, in practical terms, entails for every individual´s freedom. This moment in society could not have been reached without the achievements gained through the Enlightenment that provide the necessary and qualified freedom that society as a whole lacked before it.