I didn’t expect this site to be used to help with full essaysXD I don’t think anyone’s gunna help you with this one man, might as well just start writing urself.
Hinduism is the oldest religious philosophy still practiced today. And Buddhism made its appearance a few hundred years later, having its roots in Hinduism.
Buddhism and Hinduism are similar in that they both believe in reincarnation.
Buddhism and Hinduism are similar in that they both use meditation.
Buddhism and Hinduism are similar in that they both avoid attachment. Both Buddhists and Hindus practice non-attachment. This is mainly focused on material things and people. His belief is that attachment to material things will result in reincarnation. What to try to avoid. Therefore, both Hindus and Buddhists try to live spiritually. Avoiding attachment to the material world.
Among the differences that we can point out between these two models of philosophy and religion, it starts at a fundamental point. Hinduism believes in deities, Buddhism does not. In Buddhism, while after death what survives is the mind, in Hinduism, it is the soul.
Furthermore, when in meditation, the Buddhist aims to clear his mind, calming it down and establishing a moment of silence and peace, the Hinduist seeks, in this process, to reach a state of superior, transcendental mind.
The correct answer is:
Law enforcer of the Western Hemisphere was the role of the United States as envisioned by the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine.
The Roosevelt Corollary, consistent with his Big Stick Diplomacy, was written in 1904 after the Venezuela Crisis of 1902–03, as an addition to the Monroe Doctrine.
It stated that the US would intervene in conflicts between European and Latin American countries to enforce legitimate European claims, instead of having them pressing their claims directly.
The northwest was when Indians took over the winnapisake river and ate a raccoon
There are 3 main rites in the passage:Birth,Puberty and Marriage & Death.
- Rites of Separation:farewells/powhiri
- Rites of Liminality:passport control
- Rites of Reintegration:Housewarming/welcome home parties/hongi.
Rites of passage are the mileposts or landmarks that guide travelers through the life cycle.Arnold van Gennep, writing in 1909 about tribal ritual, first noted the similarities "among ceremonies of birth, childhood, social puberty, betrothal, marriage, pregnancy, fatherhood, initiation into religious societies and funerals."All were rites of passage and consisted of three distinct phases: separation, transition, and incorporation.