Rebecca Saxe is an associated member of the <em>McGovern Institute</em> in the MIT. She and her colleagues conducted an experiment on morals and social habits for the <em>Massachusetts Institute of Technology</em>.
The central ideas of her work can be summarized as follows:
-When people join together in groups, anything can happen; the best and the worst.
-There is a positive side of those alliances but there is always a dark side. Belonging to any kind of group make people to cause some kind of harm to the people outside that group.
-As an expert in <em>cognitive neuroscience</em>, Saxe expresses that "people that belong to a group commit actions that often are against the moral standards of every person in the group". That means that isolated, one individual could behave with high standards of morality, but as a member, he can do quite the contrary to what he believes in personally.
-When a member belongs to a group, he acts differently because he senses some kind of anonymity and a lack of responsibility for the group actions.
-The hypothesis of the research considers that when individuals join a group they forget their morals and personal beliefs and are prone to participate in activities they personally consider questionable.
B is the correct answer. Between is used for 2 items. Among is used for 3+ items. In this case, a soccer team, has far more than 2 players.
Answer:
Option B
Explanation:
"Zézé! Zézé! What ails you?...What is the trouble?..."
A nervous attack, perhaps?...Confusion produced in her by the touching poem?...
Which MOST ACCURATELY analyzes this section?
A) The author's structural choices foreshadow continued violent outbursts.
B) The author's structural choices in this section create tension and urgency.
C) The author's structural choices in this section provide the tale's conclusion.
D) The author's structural choices in this section create
.
The most accurate statement that best analyzes the section above is the author's structural choices which create tension and urgency.From the section, the speaker is worried about Zézé.This speaker seems to think that there is a problem (<u>What ails you?...What is the trouble?</u>) and was confused about her reaction. The author's structural choices of change in Zézé create a feeling of tension which leads to an urgency to know the response almost immediately.