Carl rogers stated that <span>some events are experienced below the threshold of awareness and are either ignored or denied.
This could happen because our brain do not considered the event as 'relevant' for us so it decided to ignore it.
Or the brain act to fulfill self-defense mechanism because the event might mentally traumatize us, so it decided to denied it.</span>
Answer:
natural and probable consequence
Explanation:
The <u>natural and probable consequence</u> doctrine provides that a person encouraging or facilitating the commission of a crime will be held liable as an accomplice for the crime he or she aided and abetted as well as for the crimes that are a likely and feasible outcome of the criminal conduct
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The natural and probable consequence doctrine states that an individual who aided another in committing a crime is liable for the crime committed and also for other related crimes which resulted in the process of committing that crime. For example, if an individual aids another the crime of home invasion and in the process occupants of the house where assaulted, according to the natural and probable consequence doctrine, the abettor is guilty of home invasion, assault even though he/she was not physically involved in the assault.
Answer:
Kuwait
Explanation:
Kuwait is a small country in western Asia located in the northwestern corner of the Persian Gulf between Iraq and Saudi Arabia. Kuwait has oil reserves which was discovered in 1938 and exportation of the crude oil started in 1946, and nomadic herding takes place there as well. Kuwait has a total population of about 4.1 million people with its largest cities having a population of less than 1 million people. Kuwait is largely a desert and is entirely in a desert scrub vegetation zone.
Answer:
Moscow was the capital of USSR and was more of an urban area. The political elite of the USSR lived there and their concerns were different from what the envisioned for the rest of the Soviet Union.
Explanation:
Farming in USSR was mostly done through collective farming. In fact, the Soviet government did not want private cultivation of land and instead encouraged and even forced people for collective farming.
The Soviet Union bevelled that most peasant farmers were 'reluctant' revolutionaries and if left on their own, might want to counter the soviet government.
Collective farming was a way to not just control food supplies but also subject peasants under a disciplined system of government control.