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melisa1 [442]
3 years ago
13

What system practiced by ancient communities in exchange of goods and services​

Social Studies
1 answer:
Veseljchak [2.6K]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Trade by barter

Explanation:

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Cooking without using strict measurements, but relying upon past experience and cooking wisdom to determine the correct proporti
Dahasolnce [82]
The answer is being heuristic. Being able to cook without the use of strict measurements, but relying on one's past experiences and cooking wisdom in order to determine the correct proportions of ingredients is an example of being heuristic. Heuristic refers to being able to teach one's self base on someone's individual discovery or learning.
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3 years ago
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What 3 things do people want to protect when they form a government
Gnom [1K]

Protect and provide

The concept of government as provider comes next: government as provider of goods and services that individuals cannot provide individually for themselves. Government in this conception is the solution to collective action problems, the medium through which citizens create public goods that benefit everyone, but that are also subject to free-rider problems without some collective compulsion.

The basic economic infrastructure of human connectivity falls into this category: the means of physical travel, such as roads, bridges and ports of all kinds, and increasingly the means of virtual travel, such as broadband. All of this infrastructure can be, and typically initially is, provided by private entrepreneurs who see an opportunity to build a road, say, and charge users a toll, but the capital necessary is so great and the public benefit so obvious that ultimately the government takes over.

A more expansive concept of government as provider is the social welfare state: government can cushion the inability of citizens to provide for themselves, particularly in the vulnerable conditions of youth, old age, sickness, disability and unemployment due to economic forces beyond their control. As the welfare state has evolved, its critics have come to see it more as a protector from the harsh results of capitalism, or perhaps as a means of protecting the wealthy from the political rage of the dispossessed. At its best, however, it is providing an infrastructure of care to enable citizens to flourish socially and economically in the same way that an infrastructure of competition does. It provides a social security that enables citizens to create their own economic security.

The future of government builds on these foundations of protecting and providing. Government will continue to protect citizens from violence and from the worst vicissitudes of life. Government will continue to provide public goods, at a level necessary to ensure a globally competitive economy and a well-functioning society. But wherever possible, government should invest in citizen capabilities to enable them to provide for themselves in rapidly and continually changing circumstances.

Not surprisingly, this vision of government as investor comes from a deeply entrepreneurial culture. Technology reporter Gregory Ferenstein has polled leading silicon Valley entrepreneurs and concludedthat they “want the government to be an investor in citizens, rather than as a protector from capitalism. They want the government to heavily fund education, encourage more active citizenship, pursue binding international trade alliances and open borders to all immigrants.” In the words of Alphabet Chairman Eric Schmidt: “The combination of innovation, empowerment and creativity will be our solution.”

This celebration of human capacity is a welcome antidote to widespread pessimism about the capacity of government to meet current national and global economic, security, demographic and environmental challenges. Put into practice, however, government as investor will mean more than simply funding schools and opening borders. If government is to assume that in the main citizens can solve themselves more efficiently and effectively than government can provide for them, it will have to invest not only in the cultivation of citizen capabilities, but also in the provision of the resources and infrastructure to allow citizens to succeed at scale

7 0
3 years ago
____________ is the idea that a group of entities, like states, are bound together in a contract or covenant.
klasskru [66]

Answer:

The correct answer to the following question will be Option C (Federalism).

Explanation:

  • Federalism is a form of government where the power is split between the government or other units of government. This compares with a unitary government, where the power is held by a centralized authority, and a confederation, where states, for example, are dominant.
  • It is the concept that in a contract or arrangement a community of people, including states, are bound together.
  • So, our federalist system of government has many advantages, such as saving us from dictatorship, dispersing authority, growing citizen involvement and increasing efficiency, and disadvantages, such as possibly defending slavery and segregation, rising inequality among states, blocking nation-states.

Therefore, Option C is the right answer.

5 0
4 years ago
What is the legal term for a type of evidence that, unless refuted by evidence to the contrary, will prove a case? A) Nolo conte
docker41 [41]

Answer:

<u>C) Prima Facie evidence</u>

Explanation:

Prima Facie evidence is a legal term used for irrefutable proof, in which case you have sufficient evidence before the trial to prove the case.

It is something assumed to be true unless substantial opposing evidence is presented on trial by the defense.

8 0
3 years ago
You cross a pure-breeding white flower with a pure-breeding red flower, and the offspring are all pink. what type of inheritance
san4es73 [151]

The F1-hybrid plants have a different phenotype (pink flowers) than either of the true-breeding parents. This is an example of incomplete dominance.

<h3>What is Incomplete Dominance? </h3>

Incomplete dominance is a form of Gene interaction in which both alleles of a gene at a locus are partially expressed, often resulting in an intermediate or different phenotype.

It is also known as partial dominance.

When none of the factors of a gene is dominant, the phenotype of a heterozygous dominant individual is a blend of dominant and recessive traits. This is called as incomplete dominance. For example, flower colour in Mirabilis jalapa.

Two common examples of incomplete dominance are height and hair color. Offspring will likely not have the exact same height or hair color as one of their parents but will often have a blend between the two parent's phenotypes.

To learn more about incomplete dominance , refer

https://brainly.in/question/8130907

#SPJ4

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2 years ago
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