Concept of causation: When one event happens because of another.
In history, it is rarely the case that there is a single cause of an event. There are often multiple causes and factors and motivations that all play into the unfolding of historical happenings. Reformation historian Roland Bainton said, "The sum of the matter is that causation is exceedingly difficult to assess. One can do no more than offer a plausible conjecture." Bainton believed there were causes of events in history, but that there could be much investigation and debate about the complexity of those causes. That's part of our work as historians -- to investigate different possibilities and theses and see which are the most likely factors in causing events to unfold as they did. And as we make our assessment of causes, we remain open to the possibility that new evidence might surface that will change our understanding of causes of what happened in the past.
During the 1920s and 1930s the political and economic challenges and trials encountered were:
1. Unemployment – many of the citizens were jobless
2. The great depression was encountered by the United States in 1929 because the stock market was crashed which caused a run on the banks.
3. There are strikes in Great Britain, the British economy was become slowly to recover
4. The United States had a post-war economic boom.
Answer:
D. Europe sank into a period of less intellectual discovery and artistic achievement.
Explanation:
That is the opposite of the renaissance
When Congress passes a Law, it can be found in the publication United States Statute at Large. The term Statute at Large is most commonly used. In this statute the laws that passed by the United States Congress are listed in chronological order.<span> It is prepared and published by the Office of the Federal Register (OFR), National Archives and Records Administration (NARA).</span>