<span>Such experiences demonstrate the cocktail party effect. <span>This
phenomenon occurs when in a place with many voices, as in a party, we
can concentrate on a single conversation, but also when listening to a
keyword from another place in the room, like our name, we can focus on
this new stimulus.
I hope my answer can help you.
</span></span>
Edmund Gwenn
I need 20 characters to answer the question lol
The answer is C Bunker Hill.
Answer:
It’s impossible to agree or disagree because the English translation of the Chinese original doesn’t lead to the same perceived interpretation.
The Chinese original refers to generational integrity and solidarity. It is not about ‘family’ in the ordinary Western sense of the word. The Chinese original abstracts the ‘family’ to non-family conceptualisations such as the state, the monarch, lordships, etc.
The quote is not really about ‘family.’
Virtually every Chinese person today understands what that quote is about, yet not many Westerners do. The translation ‘family’ should really have been ‘home,’ but home in the abstract sense.
The original was in the sense of solidarity and uniformity of the echelon of decision-makers in an organisation.
At the time of Confucius, the typical Chinese household had three or four generations of people living together.
Confucius was talking about the principle of the household decision-making defers to the seniors. In times of trouble and turmoil, this makes for solid reinforcement of uniformity of decisions, actions and assistance.
Explanation:
I hope it helped!
The Qin Dynasty (221-206 BCE) was the first dynasty of Imperial China (defined as the era of centralized, dynastic government in China between 221 BCE and 1912 CE) which united the separate states following the Warring States Period (c. 481-221 BCE), the era of near-constant warfare resulting from the decline of the Zhou Dynasty (1046-256 BCE). It was founded by Shi Huangdi (r. 221-210 BCE) who understood that the Zhou’s policy of a decentralized government had contributed to its fall and so established a centralized state which decreased the power of the aristocracy, eliminated the borders between different states, and operated according to the precepts of the philosophy of Legalism. It arose from the state of Qin (pronounced “chin”) which gave its name to China as it was the westernmost state and so the one which western merchants primarily engaged with.