Answer:
i dont think so
Explanation:
Most things which we accept, we accept on the basis of proof. That proof is not always rock solid (some of it is based on spurious media claims, for example) but there is a standard to which we hold most of our beliefs. Things that don’t meet that standard – the Tooth Fairy, let’s say – we discard as not impossible, but extremely unlikely.
God, however, many people accept with no proof at all. Belief in God is a product of upbringing, societal and cultural convention, a desire for comfort and intellectual laziness.
There is no evidence that God exists. You may have had some kind of personal experience – what we “anecdotal evidence” that has convinced you personally that he’s out there. But most people would concede that that kind of evidence is not evidence at all. It can’t be repeated under test conditions and there are other possible explanations for what may have happened.
Fact: no-one has ever presented one iota of persuasive evidence that there is a God.
this helpful?
The answer is True Department of sate is responsible
<em>I personally communicate my thoughts by saying how I feel to people around me with all honestly. </em>
<em>I am a very open and honest person. I always say how I see things and how I feel about a person, event or certain matters. But I have to be careful on the choice of words that I will say because not all people will be happy to hear my thoughts. I learned to be more sensitive with exercising my rights to be honest and open to others. I also approach people in the right time and venue to make them comfortable in awful situations and relax in embarrassing situations.</em>
More than <span>45 million people</span>
Answer:
The stove, the loud hand-clap, fear.
Explanation:
According to the classical conditioning paradigm, the neutral stimulus in this scenario is the <em>stove</em>, the unconditioned stimulus is the <em>loud hand-clap</em>, and the unconditioned response is <em>fear</em>. Fear is an unconditioned response. It has been linked to the loud clapping of the hands that her mother made every time she got near the stove. Before the association, the stove was a neutral stimulus.