Answer:
Johnson makes allusions to conflicts from throughout U.S. history. Why would he make these allusions?
<em>Johnson was making those allusion inorder to remind the american people about the history of America as a country and its struggles in terms of wars and conflict.</em>
<em>For example, his reference to Appomattox as the scene of a major Civil War battle as well as Selma and Alabama, being the site of a protest that turned violent was to show that American freedom and conflict are interwined together.</em>
Explanation:
The correct option is A.
The Luguru tribe of East Africa believe that the ancestral spirits are concerned with guiding human affairs. The people believe that these ancestral spirits are watching over them and that they are the one that is responsible for bringing them success or woes, so they worship them and always take care not to offend them.
Answer:
stimulus generalization
Explanation:
<u>Stimulus generalization is the process that occurs when our conditioned reaction to one stimulus is similar to the reaction that revokes other, sometimes identical, stimulus.</u>
In this example, we see that Sheeba is reacting to the sound of the vacuum cleaner, and she started connecting the noise of the vacuum to the noise of the mixer. Therefore, <u>they are generalized stimuli, put in the same category in her consciousness, and awaking the same barking and attacking reaction.</u>
Answer:
The religiously unaffiliated
Having the historical context in mind, the differences in meaning are the following:
- On the one hand, John Locke's statement on rights to 'life, liberty, and property,' he points out the idea of property to allude to the period in which people were not allowed to own <em>anything</em>, not even their own <em>person</em>. When he argued that the main goal of a government is to protect property rights, he meant that it must protect those rights "including the right to enjoy the fruits of our labor". When developing this ideas, Locke was influenced by society in the Americas.
- On the other hand, Thomas Jefferson, who was inspired by Locke's ideas, pointed to 'life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness'. While there is a great debate for what he refers to when he says "pursuit of happiness", the common meaning, in 1776, may have been "prosperity, thriving, wellbeing" or as Locke (since he was Jefferson's influence) describes it in An Essay Concerning Human Understanding: "<em>the highest perfection of intellectual nature lies in a careful and constant </em><u><em>pursuit of true and solid happiness;</em></u><em> so the care of ourselves, that we mistake not imaginary for real happiness, is the necessary foundation of our liberty."</em>
- "Property" may have been changed to "pursuit of happiness" since, taking into account that Jefferson harshly criticized the slavery system implemented by England in the Declaration of Independence's draft, it removed the slave as the conviction of property felt by the southern states. Another reason he used this specific phrase is to highlight his own personal interest in promoting public education. Both John Locke and Thomas Jefferson wrote about “the pursuit of happiness,” influenced by the Greek and Roman philosophical conception that happiness is linked to the civic virtues of courage, moderation, and justice, and not by wealth.