The correct answer is C. The author of passage 1 believes fish farming is beneficial to the environment, while the author of Passage 2 believes fish farming is not the solution to overfishing
Explanation:
The two passages provide a different about fish farming, which is the practice that involves raising fish rather than capturing them in their natural habitat. In the case of the passage 1, the author proposes fish farming is beneficial because this stops the problem of overfishing, this can be seen in "Fish farming helps humans continue to consume fish while protecting valuable marine resources" that shows fish farming is the way to protect the environment and the populations of fish while benefitting humans.
On the opposite, the author of passage 2 exposes the negative effects of fish farming and in this way shows this is not a solution. This can be seen in "one of the major problems with fish farming is water supply contamination" or in "it also causes destructions to habits" that supports the idea fishing farming does not solve the problems caused by overfishing.
Answer:
This part of Dr. Jekyll's confession provide information about his struggle to control his good and evil sides in the sense that:
B. It explains what allowed him to split himself in two and why he can no longer continue to do so.
Explanation:
By Robert Louis Stevenson, the Gothic novel "Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde"is about a doctor who concocts a potion that allows him to split his personality in two. One half of him is still Dr. Jekyll with all his good qualities, while the other half is Mr. Hyde, the manifestation of his dangerous and sensual side. The excerpt we are analyzing here shows what allowed the potion to work and Jekyll to split the personalities. It was a certain impure salt, which he can no longer find anywhere. Without the salt, he will not be able to make more potions and, unfortunately, Mr. Hyde is now the one taking control. Jekyll knows he will no longer be able to control Hyde without the potion.
Angry, arrogant, bitter, candid, confused, cynical, excited, formal, grim, ironic, joyful, loving, optimistic, pessimistic, resentful, sarcastic, solemn, tragic, witty, worried