<h3>In other words education and its institutions such as the school, university, classrooms and curriculums are all social facts. They exist in society and are a reflection of society. Because they are social facts they cannot be the cause for society; rather it is the reverse that is true.</h3>
The correct answer is: it is possible that an interest in politics caused Jessica to join the <span>political science club.
The argument in the question is flawed because it automatically assumes that Jessica's </span>involvement in her school's political science club led her to take an interest in politics, rather than the other way round, when in fact it is possible that an interest in politics is what actually caused Jessica to join the political science club. The argument in the question is flawed because it made a causal claim simply by an unfounded assumption.
The history of religion in early Virginia begins with the commencing of Anglican<span>services in Jamestown 1607, which became the established church in 1619, and culminates with the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom in 1786.</span>
Answer: A criminal?
Explanation: There’s no context
I think it is false because the least populated country in the world, Vatican City, has fewer than 1,000 residents and is still considered a country