<span>National identity based on language or culture - ROMANTICISM
The importance of reason and science in studying society - ENLIGHTENMENT
An intellectual and artistic movement - ROMANTICISM
Democratic principles based on basic human rights - ENLIGHTENMENT
Questioning of the absolute control of monarchs - ENLIGHTENMENT
A response to the ideals or rationalism - ROMANTICISM
As you look at those responses, are you seeing a pattern? Romanticism had an intellectual aspect to its movement, but was mostly a movement about emotion and nature and national sentiment. It was in response to the seeming "cold" rationalism and empiricism that had been priorities during the Enlightenment.</span>
It was either A or Florence
Answer:
What problem does your topic face?
Explanation:
Turtles are killed for their eggs, meat, skin, and shells, sea turtles suffer from poaching and over-exploitation. They also face habitat destruction and accidental people accidentally catching them.
The ways to help turtles are to reduce marine debris that may entangle or be accidentally eaten by sea turtles, participate in coastal clean-ups and reduce plastic use to keep our beaches and ocean clean, carry reusable water bottles and shopping bags, and keep nesting beaches dark and safe for sea turtles.
<u>Here are your matches:</u>
John Locke = philosopher
Boston Tea Party = British reacted with Intolerable Acts
Sugar and Molasses Act = tax reduced after boycotts
Navigation Acts = required colonies to trade only with England
Saratoga = turning point of the Revolution
Quartering Act = required colonists to house troops
George Rogers Clark = captured western British forts
Proclamation of 1763 = forbade settlement beyond Alleghenies
Iroquois = British allies in the Revolution
French and Indian War = British obtained Canada
Permit me to say a bit more about John Locke, the philosopher -- as important background to the American Revolution.
The American founding fathers read Locke (as well as other Enlightenment writers). The American Revolution (1775-1783) was inspired by ideas such as those of Locke. John Locke (1632-1704) argued for the idea of a "social contract." According to his view, a government's power to govern comes from the consent of the people themselves -- those who are to be governed. This was a change from the previous ideas of "divine right monarchy" -- that a king ruled because God appointed him to be the ruler. Locke repudiated the views of divine right monarchy in his<em> First Treatise on Civil Government.</em> In his <em>Second Treatise on Civil Government, </em>Locke argued for the rights of the people to create their own governments according to their own desires and for the sake of protecting their own life, liberty, and property.