a) One of the differences between the First Great Awakening and the Enlightenment was the fact that, while the First Great Awakening emphasized personal feelings and subjective experience, the Enlightenment focused much more on cold, hard facts. The First Great Awakening encouraged the idea that each person could have a different experience with religion, and that only they could decide how best to practice it. On the other hand, the Enlightenment was a philosophical movement that attempted to get rid of subjectivity in favor of uniformity driven by science.
b) One similarity between these two movements was the fact that they both questioned traditional authorities. In the case of the First Great Awakening, people began to question priests and their sterile speeches, and instead began to follow their own feelings. In the case of the Enlightenment, people questioned traditional authorities, such as priests and kings and instead tried to exercise their own reason.
c) One historical effect of the Enlightenment in North America was th Revolutionary War. To a very large extent, the Revolutionary War was motivated by the ideas of the Enlightenment that originated with philosophers such as Rousseau, Locke and Montesquieu.
Inside the Manor is a land managed by feudal landlords four areas can be found in it which is the village, farmland, meadow land and wasteland.
The village is the place where the people live. The farmland is the place where the people plant and have livestock for, the meadowland is the place for the animals to graze on grass and the wasteland is the place where they kept all their garbages.
Created in 1924 by the Rogers Act, the Foreign Service combined all consular and diplomatic services of the U.S. government into one administrative unit. In addition to the unit's function, the Rogers Act defined a personnel system under which the United States Secretary of State is authorized to assign diplomats<span> abroad.</span>
The correct answer is "The United States hoped to benefit from problems in Latin America.".
Latin American governments are considered as "faulty democracies" or "pseudo-democracies", as government institutions are constantly threated by external fights for power.
Latin America is also a region with many resources, therefore, by aiding governments in this region. The United States lays a path to good relationships with the regimes that will result in ease in trade relations and foreign investment by private American Enterprises in these countries.