The most ethical action the football player could take is to report the hazard. He would be tempted by his desire to succeed/win the playoff, as it is an important game. If I was the football player, I would report the hazard because if I didn’t, someone could get hurt or my team could be punished/forced to forfeit.
Answer:
because Science and technology gives you solid proof. ... But that is not the case with humanity and social sciences. It is perspectives, attitudes, and emotions.
Answer: C) Is accepted as true until proven false
==========================================================
Explanation:
We cannot prove the hypothesis to be 100% true because there might be data out there that we haven't accounted for, or some scenario that we haven't thought of yet. There's always going to be room for uncertainty and doubt. Keep in mind that such doubt does not necessarily mean that the theory is automatically false.
So all of this rules out choice A.
Choice B is ruled out as well because data supporting a hypothesis doesn't falsify the hypothesis. The term "falsify" means "to prove false" as you'd expect.
Choice C is the answer because the data seems to support the hypothesis and again we leave room for error. It's quite possible that in some unspecified date in the future, there are better methods of measurement to get a better sense of what's going on.
Choice D is ruled out because a law refers to something like the law of gravity. It's something you observe but it doesn't explain why something works. It doesn't provide the underlying mechanics of what's going on. We simply just report what we see which is exactly what an observation is.
Which of the following is NOT a typical practice in growing rice in Asia?
A. preparing fields with a plow drawn by oxen
<u>B. flooding the plowed land with water
</u>
C. transplanting the seedlings grown in a dry place to the flooded land
D. harvesting the rice by hand
E. arranging the fields in circular patterns
Answer:
increased interest rates, lower income, decline in investments, uncertainty increases