Marlow is rather ambiguous in his work Doctor Faustus when it comes to fate and free will.
On one hand, it is implied that Faustus has the opportunity to choose his own destiny, to make the appropriate decision, repent for his sins, and then he will be saved. One of the angels tells him the following:
<em>"Faustus, repent yet, God will pity thee." </em>(Act II Scene III)
On the other hand, however, it is implied several times throughout the work that Faustus's decisions don't really matter - his life was preordained, meaning that destiny chooses what happens with him and his life. This leads us to believe that regardless of his desires, Faustus would always go down the 'evil' path because ultimately that wasn't even his decision - it was what destiny picked for him.
Answer:
A reliable source like the World Health Organization (WHO) or The Centers of disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Explanation:
they are verified and reliable.
7/4 - 5/4
= 2/4
= 1/2
and
21/24 - 9/24
= 12/24
= 1/2
Hope this helps!!
It was back then, I’d say when I was around 8 years old. I would always watch horror movies and horror documentaries, which was a terrible idea at the time. Whenever I tend to finish them, I’d close the lights in living room and run as fast as I could upstairs into my room. My door would then be shut closed, my windows would be locked as I hide under my blankets frightened that monsters would get to me and eat me alive.
Another scenario, When I was maybe around 10 years old, I would use to go out the woods around my house at night with a flashlight. It was that one day, I can remember as clear as sky I saw glowing red eyes deep inside the forest. It was cold then, back in New York I used to live. I was frightened to death and ran back inside the house scared
Funny perhaps, I was a weird kid back then