<span>In this excerpt from Walden by Henry David Thoreau, the one that can be inferred about where transcendentalist thinkers searched for divinity is B, nature and humanity. This content is a reflection upon straightforward living in regular environment. The work is a section individual affirmation of autonomy, social trial, the voyage of profound disclosure, parody, and manual for independence.</span>
<span>The sentence which best describes Paine's claim in the excerpt is God would defend the American colonists' fight because their cause was upright. In the beginning of the excerpt, the author says he believes that God is fair and will never give up his loyal people. The last lines point out that God knows what justice is, so there is no way to help such murderers as Britain because they did not even deserved it.</span>
<em>What is the effect of using the first person in "A Modest Proposal" by Jonathan Swift?</em>
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<u><em>C.</em></u>
<u><em>Readers are able to identify with the narrator's agenda.</em></u>
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<em>~Hope this answers your question!~</em>
"On Individuality" is chapter 3 in J. S. Mill's book "On Liberty". In it, Mill discusses - even though he does not define - individuality and how happiness and achievement of superior pleasures come from it. Conformity to customs could cost a person's joy in living and his/her freedom of thought.
Individuality is directly connected to liberal democracy in the sense that such form of government allows for it to be practiced. Both ideas walk hand in hand. If a person seeks individuality, he/she is striving to think and believe whatever he/she chooses right and proper, or even most profitable. Other forms of government - such as monarchy or aristocracy -, tend to limit or, on occasion, even erase the possibility of self-expression.
It is Mill's opinion that participation in a democracy cultivates the character of the citizens. And cultivation of character is a possible definition of the word individuality. Individuality is achieved when a person is able to see him/herself respected, his/her ideas heard, even if not accepted. The necessary freedom for a person to do that - to think, talk and act on his/her own terms - comes with democracy.
I'm not exactly sure but i think its rate divided by time so it would be c. 40