Answer:
D) The fundamental attribution error
Explanation:
Marilyn applies <em>The fundamental attribution error</em>, which is a persistent tendency to attribute people's actions primarily to their internal characteristics, such as their personality or their intelligence, and not to the context in which they act, regardless of the situation. She doesn't understand the motives of his professor, in consequence, she judges him.
Answer: The soldier does share responsibility for the crimes of the Holocaust because he did nothing about it. Even if he/she disagreed they did nothing but stay quiet.
Answer:
The U.S. government made reservations the centerpiece of Indian policy around 1850, and thereafter reserves became a major bone of contention between natives and non-natives in the Pacific Northwest. However, they did not define the lives of all Indians. Many natives lived off of reservations, for example. One estimate for 1900 is that more than half of all Puget Sound Indians lived away from reservations. Many of these natives were part of families that included non-Indians and children of mixed parentage, and most worked as laborers in the non-Indian economy. They were joined by Indians who migrated seasonally away from reservations, and also from as far away as British Columbia. As Alexandra Harmon's article "Lines in Sand" makes clear, the boundaries between "Indian" and "non-Indian," and between different native groups, were fluid and difficult to fix. Reservations could not bound all Northwest Indians any more than others kinds of borders and lines could.