Answer:
The speaker of "Because I Could Not Stop for Death" believes he has a goal to reach, while the speaker of "Some Keep the Sabbath Going to Church" believes he has achieved his goal.
Explanation:
"Because I couldn't stop for death" and "Some Keep the Sabbath Going to Church" are poems written by Emily Dickinson. Both poems reveal the poet's very intimate thoughts about life, death and religiosity. In “Because I could not stop for death” we can see that the speaker is participating in a ride in the carriage of death. This speaker, the speaker, is curious and I believe his goal is to find out what will happen when death reaches its final destination, as this is an uncertainty that he wants to end. In “Some Keep the Sabbath Going to Church,” on the other hand, the speaker reflects on religious practices and how these practices allow people to be dominated by religiosity. The speaker's goal was to get rid of this domain and he believes he managed to achieve this goal, as he refuses to practice religious practices, such as dedicating the Sabbath to church. The speaker prefers to stay at home, having fun and doing what he wants.
Answer:
. the inability of people to stop civilization's descent into chaos
Explanation:
Answer: the answer is increasingly complex, and depends on definitions in flux. Computers are certainly more adept at solving quandaries that benefit from their unique skillset, but humans hold the edge on tasks that machines simply can’t perform. Not yet, anyway.
Computers can take in and process certain kinds of information much faster than we can. They can swirl that data around in their “brains,” made of processors, and perform calculations to conjure multiple scenarios at superhuman speeds. For example, the best chess-trained computers can at this point strategize many moves ahead, problem-solving far more deftly than can the best chess-playing humans. Computers learn much more quickly, too, narrowing complex choices to the most optimal ones. Yes, humans also learn from mistakes, but when it comes to tackling the kinds of puzzles computers excel at, we’re far more fallible
Computers enjoy other advantages over people. They have better memories, so they can be fed a large amount of information, and can tap into all of it almost instantaneously. Computers don’t require sleep the way humans do
Explanation:
PATHOS (APPPPEEEXXX approved!!)