Answer:
Manifest
Explanation:
According to psychoanalysis, the dreams are formed by two parts:
- Manifest content: it refers to the actual content of the dream in a literal way.
- Latent content: It refers to the meaning behind the dream, it is what the dream is trying to tell to the dreamer since it is the subconscious talking to the dreamer.
In this example, Carlton is describing one of his dreams to his therapist. The events he remembers refer to the actual content of the dream in a literal way (he's not talking about the meaning behind it), therefore, this is the manifest content of his dream.
Answer:
The correct answer is : comparing pain and suffering
Missing information:
It was inevitable that she should accept any inconsistency and cruelty from her deity as all good worshippers do from theirs. All gods who receive homage are cruel. All gods dispense suffering without reason. Otherwise they would not be worshipped. Through indiscriminate suffering men know fear and fear is the most divine emotion. It is the stones for altars and the beginning of wisdom. Half gods are worshipped in wine and flowers. Real gods require blood.
Explanation:
This passage is about suffering and it is expressed as if it weren't an end in and of itself. The people involved experience the fullness of life and the good thing that may come in bad things. It is about enjoying the pain that those gods dole out and the pleasure in the pain that motivates them to worship gods.
Move west of the Mississippi Rv.
A the first one cause increasing taxes would mean spending more
It was somehow succesful because the origins of the labor movement lay in the formative years of the American nation, when a free wage-labor market emerged in the artisan trades late in the colonial period. The earliest recorded strike occurred in 1768 when New York journeymen tailors protested a wage reduction. The formation of the Federal Society of Journeymen Cordwainers (shoemakers) in Philadelphia in 1794 marks the beginning of sustained trade union organization among American workers.
From that time on, local craft unions proliferated in the cities, publishing lists of “prices” for their work, defending their trades against diluted and cheap labor, and, increasingly, demanding a shorter workday. Thus a job-conscious orientation was quick to emerge, and in its wake there followed the key structural elements characterizing American trade unionism–first, beginning with the formation in 1827 of the Mechanics’ Union of Trade Associations in Philadelphia, central labor bodies uniting craft unions within a single city, and then, with the creation of the International Typographical Union in 1852, national unions bringing together local unions of the same trade from across the United States and Canada (hence the frequent union designation “international”). Although the factory system was springing up during these years, industrial workers played little part in the early trade union development. In the 19th century, trade unionism was mainly a movement of skilled workers.