Answer:
Even though Bierce uses romantic techniques, the text has an ending with strong realist characteristics: "Peyton Farquhar was dead; his body, with a broken neck, swung gently from side to side beneath the timbers of the Owl Creek bridge." Although the majority of section 3 glorifies and paints an exhilarating picture of war with Peyton’s supposed escape, the reality is that war is gruesome and unforgiving. Bierce conveys this message with the story’s ending. The ending also demonstrates that in war, heroism doesn’t always triumph. PLATO ANSWER
What exactly are we meant to do?
The statement is partially correct, the laws would be extreme in numbers and there would be far more punishments than a state with a moderate amount of laws. There would be more laws or regulations broken or violated when it would regard certain things. But the number of laws however does not exactly show how corrupt the state may be, but how extensive or extreme the punishments for the crime would be.
A. TOUCH. The sense of touch relies on the largest sense organ in the body.
The largest sense organ in our body is our skin. Our skin houses receptors that sense touch.
Our sense of touch allows us to receive information about our internal and external environments which helps us form our sensory perceptions. The sense of touch is also the first sense we develop from our fetal stage.
Touch receptors in our skin are nerve cells that inform our brain about tactile sensations. There are two types of touch receptors. They are thermoreceptors, tell us about the temperature of the object we touch, and the mechanoreceptors, tells our bodies about pushing/pulling forces and body movements and are responsible for translating physical forces to nerve impulses that are transmitted to our brains.