Answer:
Mood congruence
Explanation:
Mood congruence is a psychological phenomenon. It is related to our mood. In this phenomenon, the person's mood is consistent with the information that the person remembers.
Even people remember the information that is associated with their experience at a certain point in time. If a person is in a happy mood then recall happy memories but if you are sad then you will recall the bad memories. When you are learning and you are angry at that time you will remember less positive events.
Thus here in the above context, Scott is in the state of mood congruence because of his father's death. His father's death leads to the other sad memories along.
Francois Quesnay - tried to discover the natural economic laws governing society.
Answer: Option A
<u>Explanation:</u>
Francois Quesnay was a French economist and physician. He published the economic table known as the Tableau economique. This published work was the first attempt to describe how an economy worked. The published work provided an analytical view of the working of an economy.
The table is considered to be the most important contribution to economic thought and is taken by many economists as the reference for developing their thesis and papers. The paper basically states who produces what in the society and who makes contributions to the society.
Answer:
Ideas such as eugenics and cloning.
Explanation:
This are controversial because would be tried in humans and would open up not only many moral and ethical debates but also in it's aplications, which cases, at which people, how, etc.
Answer:
Social learning theory
Explanation:
As you may know, the parent figure is very important in aperson´s life: Most of the things you learn in your early life are, in a way, connected to your parents: from speaking in a certain way (accent) to having a certain taste in music or movies...Why? very simple, because they are there with you all the time, and you learn to live the way your peers live, <u>you adapt </u>(and most of the times not just adapt but get to like it).
What happens to Tina may be explained by social learning theory because Tina, in her unconsious mind, learned from his father that dogs were bad and, even if she hasnt had a bad experience with them, she is still afraid of them.
<em>For example</em> have you ever had a bad experience with a spider? probably not, yet im sure you are afraid of them, simply because society has a negative image about them... and <u>you adapted</u> to live in it.