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sdas [7]
3 years ago
11

People like hunting witches too, doing their dirtiest work for you.

English
2 answers:
gtnhenbr [62]3 years ago
5 0
Is this supposed to be a riddle? I’m confused
Eddi Din [679]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

uh ok. what ever you say

Explanation:

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As you revise your book review what should make sure the purpose of the writing is?
Taya2010 [7]
I would assume the it is B
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What argument does the author anticipate and refute in this excerpt from the Declaration of Independence? Nor have We been wanti
Murljashka [212]
<span>a. If the American colonists are unhappy with the king, they should appeal to Parliament.

</span>What argument does the author anticipate and refute in this excerpt from the Declaration of Independence? "Nor have We been wanting in attentions to our<span>British brethren. We have warned them from time to time of attempts by their legislature to extend an unwarrantable jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here. We have appealed to their native justice and magnanimity, and we have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred to disavow these usurpations, which, would inevitably interrupt our connections and correspondence. They too have been deaf to the voice of justice and of consanguinity."
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NOT:

<span>b. Most British Parliament members sympathize with the plight of the American colonies.
c. The American colonies are well represented in the British Parliament and have no right to blame the king.
d. The allegations against the king made by the colonists are without proof and unjustified.
I hope I helped! :)</span>
7 0
3 years ago
what are the rights and responsibilities of a person when executing freedom of expression during verbal interpersonal conflicts?
Neko [114]

They have a right to express what they think and feel but they have to do so with respect and in a manner that would resolve conflict.  Some people just say things that though is the truth, it just make a bad situation worse. You have to choose your words carefully or people will take the wrong way.

3 0
3 years ago
According to the passage,which best deceives philosophy’s relationship with art
Vladimir [108]

Much of what goes under the name of philosophy today is cognitive science, mathematics, theology, history, or journalism. Philosophy is none of these; it is an art form whose identifying characteristic is the subjective expression of ideas about life as experienced by the philosopher.Art is anything evolved in our social species to attract attention. This may be vague, but it’s actually the only definition that is general enough to cover everything we call art, from cave paintings to dadaism to flashmobs. How it manages to attract attention and what side effects it has is what makes all the difference. You may never publish and keep it secret, but it’s still art, even by this definition, just like masturbation is still part of human sexuality. It’s just that something has to first attract attention of its own creator, who then may or may not use it to attract attention of others.

Philosophy is part of art, so defined. An insight or a speculation that comes into your head first needs to attract your attention, to seem sufficiently new and interesting to you. Only then you may share it with others who will assess its interestingness for themselves.

What sets philosophy apart, then? I think it’s in how it attracts attention, in what it appeals to in order to command attention. Philosophy was the first art to feed upon, and in turn stimulate, human curiosity for how things really are, the first one that appeared after humans could discern that “what really is” is not always what it looks like. That set philosophy apart from other forms of art that make no truth claims; some time later it also parted ways with religion (which also has its roots in generic art) in that philosophy, further, made use of the capacity of reasoning. But the evolutionary basics remained the same: whatever attracts attention, survives. The integral estimate of survivability, for philosophy, is its persuasiveness: if I can follow the reasoning and it rings true to me, it is good philosophy; if, in addition to that, it is also new and interesting (“gosh, how come I didn’t think of this before!”), it is excellent philosophy that will survive (at least) in my mind and procreate by affecting (at least) my own philosophizing.

Further down the road, however, an interesting thing happened. The persuasiveness selector was continuously refined and made stricter, and at some point it turned into something quite different: verifiability. Science was born, and it gradually separated from philosophy which continued to use the old persuasiveness selector. (Verifiability, in turn, split into internal (mathematics) and external (the rest of sciences)).

So, what can we make of progress in philosophy, in this view? Does it even make sense? Unlike scientists, philosophers never achieve a “widespread agreement” on anything. But neither can we appeal to the sheer volume or diversity of the modern philosophy – if “every man is his own philosophy” then the only progress we have is demographic.

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3 years ago
The puppet show which Serena had created all by herself was a huge success.
Norma-Jean [14]

The puppet show, which Serena had created all by herself, was a huge success.

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