<span>A.misguided .................................................</span>
In this poem we can see the comparison of two points of view about one subject, in the first part of the poem, the speaker is in a lecture of an apparently very successful astronomer, where he sees charts, equations and numbers that represent many aspect of the stars, the speaker gets bored and doesn't seem to find any of this information interesting, so he goes out and sees the stars in the night sky and realizes that he doesn't need to understand all the numbers an science behind them to be able to appreciate their beauty.
So basically the romantic ideas are that even though the astronomer finds his/her passion in the science, to the writer, the science distracted him from the beauty of the stars themselves
The structure of the poem reinforce this idea, first by using contractions as learn'd, wander'd, the writer wants us to realize that the speaker doesn't have an educational level as high as the astronomer. Also, at the beginning of the poem, it is basically a description of the lecture told without much excitement otherwise, when the speaker goes out, the description became so much full of emotion, ex: In the mystical moist night-air..
A shows the correct grammar usage for a comma.
Answer:
The mastermind that worked with Freud was Albert Einstein, a German-born theoretical physicist that in 1931, the Institute for Intellectual Cooperation invited to a cross-disciplinary exchange of ideas about politics and peace with a thinker of his choosing. Einstein choose Sigmund Freud despite of being skeptical of psychoanalysis he came to admire Freud's work and working with him.
The realization of the book was mainly based on a series of letters were they discussed the abstract generalities of human nature and the potential concrete steps for reducing violence in the world. This entire work was published in 1933. Only 2,000 copies of the English translation were printed, most of which were lost during the World War II. But some of the correspondence are part of the 1960 volume Einstein on Peace.