Answer:
hello your question is incomplete below is the complete question
How are the lines from The Dunciad that appear in the lesson a parody of Milton's account of Creation? Here she [Dulness] beholds the Chaos dark and deep,Where nameless Somethings in their causes sleep,Till genial Jacob, or a warm Third day,Call forth each mass, a Poem, or a Play:How hints, like spawn, scarce quick in embryo lie,How newborn nonsense first is taught to cry,Maggots half formed in rhyme exactly meet,And learn to crawl upon poetic feet.
Explanation:
The lines from The Dunciad that appear in the lesson a parody of Milton's account of creation describes the creation account of been rudimentary, vile, and base literary works by the goddess "Dulness" to stupefy England which is parallel to Milton's creation account in the book 'Paradise Lost', which was derived from the bible book of Genesis.
<span>The question is asking us whether it is true that the media can affect us even if we are not aware that we are being influenced by it. This is true. Think for example of smoking: if you see positive personas smoke on screen (that is, people in movies who are presented in a positive light), you might develop positive associations with smoking, even if you are not thinking about it consciously.</span>
Answer:
The name was given to it because it's a huge stretch of unbroken sand desert that has bested kings, adventurers, and nomads for thousands of years.
Answer:
The attitude of not practicing what you preach as displayed by Pastors
Explanation:
When a pastor mounts a pulpit to preach the need or to pay evil for evil, it creates a cognitive feeling of the essence of doing good. But when the same preacher is seen living contrary to what he preached, for example fighting because of money, it invariably redefine ones notion, attitude, belief and behaviour, most especially after making a resolve not to fight again.
This consistency theory is purportedly postulated by Karman's theory of notion.