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Cerrena [4.2K]
4 years ago
15

Discuss three challenges you might face post-schooling that you would turn into an opportunity​

Social Studies
1 answer:
Troyanec [42]4 years ago
4 0

Answer:

1.Not being able to turn in your work fast enough, you could turn in other projects that are due along with it to get it out of your way.

2.Being early to class, Its annoying and cringy. You could study for a class or work on other assignments due, or just take a breather.

3.Being late for the bus (this happened to me 1 time this year after school  'not fun'). You could get up a lot earlier, which could make you body more healthy instead of sleeping in, and you could have time to make breakfast because most kids don't

hope it helps!<3, You are not the only one asking this loLl.

Explanation:

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The correct answer is the rationale.

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There is no such evidence that help us to support the test key premise of Myers-Briggs in which the knowledge of a person's type trusty predicts the behavior on the job or in relationships. So, with rationale, we can infer or deduct that behav

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homógrafa

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4 years ago
What rights does Hobbes believe it is never rational to abandon
Lesechka [4]

Answer:

For many centuries, natural law was recognized as a type of higher law that spelled out universal truths for the moral ordering of society based on a rational understanding of human nature. As a higher moral law, it gave citizens a standard for determining if the written laws and customs of their nation or any other nation were just or unjust, right or wrong, humane or inhumane. Today, natural law is not discussed very much, at least not explicitly. When mentioned at all, it is usually rejected as dangerous because it undermines existing laws or as intolerant because it is contrary to “multiculturalism,” which requires the non-judgmental acceptance of other cultures.

This negative view of natural law can be traced to Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679), whose writings are largely devoted to showing the anarchy and civil wars caused by appeals to natural and divine laws above the will of the sovereign. Hobbes rejected traditional higher law doctrines and encouraged people to accept the established laws and customs of their nations, even if they seemed oppressive, for the sake of civil peace and security. His critique has been a leading cause of the demise of natural law and the acceptance of positive law as the only reliable guide for political authority.

One may be equally surprised to learn, however, that many people today embrace a different (and seemingly contradictory) view of natural law, and this too is traceable to Thomas Hobbes. For example, when conscientious people are confronted with violations of human rights—as in religious theocracies that violate women’s rights or in countries that allow sweatshops to trample on worker’s rights—they feel compelled to protest the injustice of those practices and to change them for the better. The protesters usually deny that they are following natural law, but they obviously are asserting a belief in universal moral truths that are grounded in human nature—in this case, the natural equality of human beings that underlies human rights. This understanding of higher law originates with Hobbes because he was largely responsible for transforming classical natural law into modern natural rights, thereby beginning the “human rights revolution” in thinking on natural law. How is it possible for Hobbes and his followers to embrace seemingly contradictory views of natural law, rejecting one form as intolerant, self-righteous, and anarchical, while embracing another form as the universal ideal of social justice? Let us turn to Hobbes for an answer to this puzzle, and, in so doing, uncover the sources of our modern conceptions of law, rights, and justice.

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Explanation:

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