Answer:
<h3>The contract should be dissolved if any people are being oppressed.</h3>
Explanation:
In the second passage, the author <u>does not make any provisions for oppression or exploitation</u>. The author strongly argues that social contract should be an association of every single individual who would enjoy equal freedom and opportunities as everyone.
The author's view on the dissolution of the social contract best reflects on the statement 'The contract should be dissolved if any people are being oppressed.'
The author says that social contract would be no more a contract if any person is being oppressed or exploited.
Answer:
Taking over the Kingdom and the Queen
Explanation:
King Claudius addresses the court as the new king, informing how he, in the time of deep sorrow over the death of his brother, 'fought discretion with nature' to continue with the affairs of the state since it was monumental loss, yet the state must have a king. Taking the welfare of the 'warlike' state into account, Claudius marries his brother's wife, 'the imperial jointress' and hence he says he has done a right thing. Though he calls it 'a defeated joy' with a dropping eye, he usurps the kingdom very smartly. Claudius is quick in marrying his brother's wife since both 'funeral' and 'marriage' go simultaneously. Claudius's hurry in marriage is a scheme in taking the queen to his side in order to isolate Hamlet, the rightful heir and to prove to the world how much he cares about the kingdom and his dead brother.
The answer to your question is fill