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alexandr402 [8]
2 years ago
15

Please Help important ❗️❗️❗️

History
1 answer:
xxMikexx [17]2 years ago
5 0
C , if not then try C again . Have a nice day :)
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Can someone please help me please
Wittaler [7]

Answer:

yes

Explanation:

whats the question ??

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3 years ago
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A king controls all property in a state, creates and enforces laws, levies taxes, and acts as a judge in legal cases. His word i
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The political system in place in that country would be a Monarchy. Have a great day!
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Describe the main idea of each scientist:
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  • Answer by YourHope:  Hi! :)  Copernicus: was a Renaissance-era mathematician and astronomer.  Galileo: was an Italian astronomer, physicist and engineer.  Keplar: was a German astronomer, mathematician, and astrologer.  Bacon: was an English philosopher and Franciscan.  Descartes: was a French philosopher, mathematician, and scientist.  Newton: was an English mathematician, physicist, astronomer, theologian, and author.  Ana de Osorio: was a Spanish nobleman and captain general.  Andreas Vesalius: was a 16th-century Flemish anatomist, physician, and author.  Have a BEAUTIFUL day~
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2 years ago
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Compare and contrast Hobbes’ and Locke’s views of human nature and the role government should play
svet-max [94.6K]

Thomas Hobbes believed that people were inherently suspicious of one another and in competition with one another.  This led him to propose that government should have supreme authority over people in order to maintain security and a stable society.

John Locke argued that people were born as blank slates, open to learning all things by experience.  Ultimately this meant Locke viewed human beings in a mostly positive way, and so his approach to government was to keep the people empowered to establish and regulate their own governments for the sake of building good societies.

Further explanation:

Both English philosophers believed there is a "social contract" -- that governments are formed by the will of the people.  But their theories on why people want to live under governments were very different.

Thomas Hobbes published his political theory in <em>Leviathan</em>  in 1651, following the chaos and destruction of the English Civil War.  He saw human beings as naturally suspicious of one another, in competition with each other, and evil toward one another as a result.  Forming a government meant giving up personal liberty, but gaining security against what would otherwise be a situation of every person at war with every other person.

John Locke published his <em>Two Treatises on Civil Government</em> in 1690, following the mostly peaceful transition of government power that was the Glorious Revolution in England.  Locke believed people are born as blank slates--with no preexisting knowledge or moral leanings.  Experience then guides them to the knowledge and the best form of life, and they choose to form governments to make life and society better.

In teaching the difference between Hobbes and Locke, I've often put it this way.  If society were playground basketball, Hobbes believed you must have a referee who sets and enforces rules, or else the players will eventually get into heated arguments and bloody fights with one another, because people get nasty in competition that way.   Locke believed you could have an enjoyable game of playground basketball without a referee, but a referee makes the game better because then any disputes that come up between players have a fair way of being resolved.    Of course, Hobbes and Locke never actually wrote about basketball -- a game not invented until 1891 in America by James Naismith.  But it's just an illustration I've used to try to show the difference of ideas between Hobbes and Locke.   :-)

8 0
3 years ago
PLEASE HELP!
Alborosie

Answer:

A different Enlightenment thought.

Explanation:

The Declaration of Independence features the Enlightenment ideas of a <u><em>social contract</em></u> (power exchange between citizens and the government to ensure a citizens protection), <u><em>popular sovereignty</em></u> (the idea that the government's power comes from the people, so the people have the right to rule the government), and unalienable <u><em>natural rights</em></u> (rights we are all born with. In the Declaration of Independence, these rights are defines as the right to live, pursue of happiness, and be free [liberty]).

8 0
3 years ago
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