Smith had not been one to let religious attitude restrict his thinking. He believed that more wealth to common people would benefit a nation's economy and society as a whole. In The Wealth of Nations, Smith described a self-regulating market.
Answer:
Their presentation, Especially when it comes to answering the big political questions. (people just caught up in the heat of the moment)
Explanation:
We had segregated schools in the first place because Americans used to own slaves, at least the richer ones did. And after Abraham Lincolns emancipation proclamation, slaves slowly became freed. They were their own people. But many whites didn’t like that. They feared that. The white people did not like that black people now got to live with them as their equals. So they made it so there were separate drinking fountains, separate tables, and separate schools (among many other separate things)
Overall it was white people being afraid of or not liking that black people would have equality
Writing about nineteenth-century women's travel writing, Lila Harper notes that the four women she discussed used their own names, in contrast with the nineteenth-century female novelists who either published anonymously or used male pseudonyms. The novelists doubtless realized that they were breaking boundaries, whereas three of the four daring, solitary travelers espoused traditional values, eschewing radicalism and women's movements. Whereas the female novelists criticized their society, the female travelers seemed content to leave society as it was while accomplishing their own liberation. In other words, they lived a contradiction. For the subjects of Harper's study, solitude in both the private and public spheres prevailed—a solitude that conferred authority, hitherto a male prerogative, but that also precluded any collective action or female solidarity.
Answer:
E. While traveling alone in the nineteenth-century was considered a radical act for a woman, the nineteenth-century solitary female travelers generally held conventional views.
Explanation:
What best characterizes the "contradiction" that the author refers to is "While traveling alone in the nineteenth-century was considered a radical act for a woman, the nineteenth-century solitary female travelers generally held conventional views."
This is evident in the passage where it was written that "Whereas the female novelists criticized their society, the female travelers seemed content to leave society as it was while accomplishing their own liberation."
Answer:
the challenge of responsibility
Explanation:
Determining the extent of a leader's involvement in an activity is called THE CHALLENGE OF RESPONSIBILITY