The correct answer is B.
The presence of robots and cyborgs in cience fiction most often makes us question what is the real difference between humans and machines.
In most of this stories, robots develop feelings and emotions, either possitive or negative, for his owners and society in general. They are treated badly in general since they are considered to be less than humans. Robots and cyborgs are built to be servants and nothing else.
But, if they develop emotions, such as love and hate, and a conscience that allows them to separate right from wrong, what really differentiate them from humans?
Answer:
An Ad Hominem fallacy is when someone personally attacks you to avert the audience from the real point.
Explanation:
<u>Example</u>: Person 1 - <em>"We should raise the minimum wage!"</em>
Person 2 - <em>"Oh please, don't listen to her, she's not even smart</em>
<em> enough to run a business!"</em>
Person 1 attacked Person 2 without even saying why raising the minimum wage is a bad idea. Ad Hominem is when someone insults another person instead of giving reasoning to why their opinion/statement is a bad idea. They try and steer you away from the point so that you agree with them. Maybe Person 1 isn't smart enough to run a business, but maybe she has a good idea in why they should raise the minimum wage.
It allows poor, middle, and lower classes to afford health care
Kafka choose it because of the perception that a bug is perceived as a mindless systematic creature, a metaphor for the way Gregor lives his life, and acts in society