Answer:
<u>a) He does not think women find him attractive</u>
Explanation:
These lines are part of the final lines of The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock written by T. S. Eliot, in which a modern, educated, yet emotionally unstable man (Prufrock) expresses his own thoughts on life, society, inadequacy, women, self-image, and shows his anxiety, especially toward human interaction and women rejecting him. In the last lines, Prufrock switches his attention to a beach and fantastic images of mermaids singing to each other, that will never sing to him. Following his pessimistic views, here Prufrock conveys that he feels that women ignore him and do not find him attractive.
<u>Answer:</u>
The decision from any journalist that violates the ethics of journalism is "A reporter writes a story about his wife’s company without revealing their relationship" and "A magazine runs a series of articles speculating about a celebrity’s medical history".
Option: (c) and (d)
<u>Explanation:</u>
- Society of Professional Journalists is the organization that represents the entire journalists of United States and it sets the boundary line for the journalist’s activities.
- For any journalist who attempts to write about the company of his wife without any mentioned relationship of theirs, it would violate the law.
- Similarly, it is beyond the ethics to write the series of reports about the medical history of celebrity.
Answer:
It is based on dogmatism.
Explanation:
While Skepticism is a term in philosophy, which is considered as a behavior, or a form of doubt in relation to the truth of a particular thing or situation. It stated that absolute certain knowledge is impossible.
On the other hand, Unmitigated skepticism which is a form of skepticism, claims that categorically and dogmatically it knows that no one knows anything. This appears contradictory and apparently self-defeating.
Hence, among some of the reasons why unmitigated skepticism is difficult for a person to consistently hold as a serious philosophical position is because it dogmatically accept a position or knowledge that no one knows anything, which is self-defeating and contradictory.