Answer: People respond to incentives
Explanation:
What is an incentive?
An incentive refers to the punishment or reward that will affect how a person act towards a particular situation. Logically people decide their actions based on what the benefits will be.
Incentives determines the function of the market world for instance when a price of a particular brand of bread decide to raise their price people may decide to buy other brand of bread more than they buy the expensive brand of bread.
The incentive of being in a smoke free restaurant is causing people to drive all the way for just that benefit.
Answer:
reversibility
Explanation:
For Piaget, the cognitive development of the human being begins from the moment of his birth and becomes more efficient and comprehensive as this individual ages and his brain is trained more intensively. For Paiget, this development occurs at stages that are related to the age of the individuals.
Within this theory, Piaget, developed the concept of cognitive reversibility, which is the stage in which a child manages to develop logical thinking, where he is aware of size, quantity, movements and any other situation that is logical.
As we can see in the question above, the youngest nephew has difficulty understanding that if no material is removed from the ball, it will have no less material, even if it is rolled on a long surface. This is a logical concept that the child has a hard time understanding because his cognitive knowledge is still weak in reversibility.
Answer:
d. the person
Explanation:
The real psychological, and then societal and cultural, implication of one's death is the leave of the person and the vacancy they leave in the society's structure.
<u>Each person has it's own place in the structure of the family, neighborhood, job, etc. and with death, the rest must learn how to cope with their leave and continue without implications.</u>
It is also notable that the body in most of the cultures is just the symbol of the person, while the real person is connected to their social role, identity and behavior, which they fulfill and have while alive. This is why in many cultures the death of the brain is taken as the "real" and legal death - <u>only the leave of the person's identity, social role and function is really what the environment misses with one's death.</u>