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Yanka [14]
3 years ago
14

summarize an answer to this question: What effect did the Open Door Policy have on those involved; China, United States and Euro

pean countries?
Social Studies
1 answer:
skelet666 [1.2K]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

The creation of the Open Door Policy increased foreign influence in China, which led to a rise in anti-foreign and anti-colonial sentiment in the country. The backlash against foreigners led to widespread killings of missionaries working in China and an increase in nationalist feelings among the Chinese.

Explanation:

I don't really know if this is correct but I tried-

Also are you bi?

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Two factors that create a story's setting are time period and?
Levart [38]
The answer of this is place
5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
PLEASE ANSWER FAST!!
Setler79 [48]

Answer:

Forgiveness is impossible. This was the thought of the philosopher Jacques Derrida, and he has a good point.

There are some things that we say are easy to forgive. But, Derrida argues, they don't actually need forgiving. I forget to reply to an email, and my friend remarks: "Oh, it didn't really matter anyway." It's not that he forgave me. He'd forgotten about the email too.Then, there are other things we say are hard to forgive, and we admire those who appear to be able to forgive nonetheless. The case of Rais Bhuiyan, who was shot by Mark Stroman, is a case in point. Bhuiyan says he forgave Stroman, and asked the Texas authorities not to execute him for his crime. But did Bhuiyan really forgive?

He writes of how Stroman was ignorant and had a terrible upbringing. He had seen signs that Stroman was now a changed man. So, it does not seem that Bhuiyan forgave his assailant. Rather, he came to understand him. He saw the crime from the perpetrator's point of view. There were reasons for the wrongdoing. That lets Stroman off the hook. It's not really forgiveness.

CS Lewis wrote: "Everyone says forgiveness is a lovely idea, until they have something to forgive." Which is again to imply that those who think they have offered forgiveness really find they don't have anything to forgive after all.The ancient philosophers appear to have thought that forgiveness is something of a pseudo-subject, too. They hardly touched on it, for all that they dwelt on all manner of other moral concerns. It is not on any list of virtues.

Take Aristotle. He wrote about pardoning people, but only when they are not responsible. "There is pardon," he says, "whenever someone does a wrong action because of conditions of a sort that overstrain human nature, and that no one would endure." When nature has not been overstrained, justice must meet wrongdoing. Forgiveness doesn't come into it.

All this calls into question a theory in evolutionary psychology. Here, the argument is that forgiveness is essential to our evolutionary success.It's because we forgive one another that we are able to live in large groups. People in collectives like cities are bound to offend one another all the time, the theory goes. It's because we are so ready to forgive and continue to co-operate that we don't, as a rule, destroy ourselves in spirals of retribution.

But I'm not sure that's right. Evolutionary doctrine itself undermines our capacity to forgive. Rather, it teaches that we learn it's in our own self-interest to co-operate. We put up with others because, at some deep level, we know we serve ourselves in so doing. That's not forgiveness.

Surely, you might be thinking, Christianity teaches forgiveness, a forgiveness that is real. But once more, that can be challenged. Take the parable of the prodigal son. You may half remember it as the paradigmatic tale of forgiveness, the father forgiving the son in spite of his profligacy. But read it again. Forgiveness is not once mentioned. The son does not ask for it. The father does not offer it. Rather, when the son returns, the father spontaneously throws a party

5 0
3 years ago
This is a quote from the agreements made by the Allied Powers at the Yalta Conference.
Akimi4 [234]

Answer:

a yrtfcdd b tygfi c ytftdc d tir85f

Explanation:

tfu rdyes m4rd7 5fvg yibbgtfi

8 0
3 years ago
An older client admits that the thought of dying is not pleasant however it is an expectation that life eventually ends. What sh
mariarad [96]

This client’s statement suggests to the nurse that the client has had previous experiences with death.

Answer: Option A

<u>Explanation:</u>

  • The given statement clearly shows that the death will happen in everyone’s life even though it is not much good. So, from this clearance, check with the given choices.
  • Customers' responses to death are affected by past death experiences, their age, physical status, life philosophy, and religious, spiritual trusts and cultural belief.
  • The client's phrases do not indicate that the client is misleading, refuses to accept death or that the client will not talk about death in future. So, option A would be matched for given phrase.
7 0
3 years ago
Through what learning process did the students learn to fold the napkin? Correct Answer(s) Drag appropriate answer(s) here vicar
Tanzania [10]

Answer: Your question is incomplete. Please let me assume this to be your question;

A student watches the teacher fold a napkin, the student went home and helped the mother to fold napkin for her baby sister. Through what learning process did the students learn to fold the napkin? Correct Answer(s) Drag appropriate answer(s) here

a. vicarious conditioning

b. negative reinforcement

c. verbal instructions alone

d. observational learning modeling

ANSWER: Option a and option d are most correct option. Vicarious conditioning and observational learning model.

Explanation: vicarious conditioning is an Observational learning model, were one learn by observation. That means option a and option d means the same thing and can be used interchangeably. In vicarious learning, communication is non verbal and uninvolved, as the person learns by only observing the person perform a task.

Because the student has learnt how to fold a napkin by only watching the teacher folding the napkin, it is an Observational learning.

7 0
4 years ago
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