Jean-Jacques Rousseau, because he believed that the education is a basics of everything.
Explanation:
- He believed that modern culture was a negation of nature, and therefore he said that people should return to nature - freedom and equality.
- For Rousseau, inequality arose with private property and the state contracted. For Jean Jacques Rousseau education was the cornerstone of society.
- Rousseau's immense influence is that he was the first true philosopher of Romanticism. It mentions for the first time many of the themes that dominated intellectual life for the next hundred years, such as: elevating feelings and innocence and diminishing the importance of the intellect; lost unity of human race and nature; a dynamic conception of human history and its various levels; belief in theology and the possibility of restoring extinct freedom.
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Push pull factors I’m pretty sure
Correct answer: C) seclusionist
Details:
Writing for <em>Ranker, </em>Danielle Ownbey notes: "The Amish live a secluded life away from other Americans (known to them as the English). Because of this seclusion, the average person knows very few facts about the inner workings of the Amish religion and culture."
Your question mentioned the role of the Supreme Court in protecting the rights of the Amish to follow their own beliefs and practices. An example would be the case, <em>Wisconsin v. Jonas Yoder </em>(1972), in which the decision of the Supreme Court was that a state could not compel education past 8th grade for Amish children. The case revolved around some Amish families who would not send their children to New Glarus High School in Wisconsin. County court held the parents responsible (represented by Jonas Yoder, one of the Amish fathers). However, the Wisconsin Supreme Court and then the US Supreme Court found in favor of Yoder and the Amish families. The parents' right to freedom of religion was seen as a stronger concern than the state's interest in educating children. An interesting fact about the <em>Wisconsin v. Yoder </em>case is that the Amish typically would not go to court to settle a dispute, because that would be a move beyond what their religious beliefs would allow. But a Lutheran minister named William Lindholm took up their cause for the sake of protecting religious freedom as a primary right. Lindholm established the National Committee for Amish Religious Freedom.
Answer:
If you still need help so I can
Explanation:
D they really didn’t like the rule of the king and his government which was very unfair