I think your question if if they can "co-exist", correct?
They can and they have coexisted many times in the past, and even today. A monarchy with teocracy happens when there is a ruler (monarch ) who has an absolute or near-absolute power and claims to derive this power from God.
A historical example is ancient Egypt and a current example is Vatican City
A theodicy for some given fact about evil is an explanation for why God would have an all‐things‐considered sufficient reason to allow that evil. The counterpart theodicy relies on a metaphysical claim about existence. We cannot know what "good" is unless there is "evil" to contrast it with. (1) Doesn't justify all kinds of evil (Do we need genocide to know what goodness is?), (2) Doesn't justify the amount of evil (Do we need so much killing/theft to know what goodness is?), (3) God can know good/evil prior to creation/evil.
The supreme court is the highest federal court of the United states.
One of the criteria used to decide which cases a supreme court should review is The case must be involved in important legal question that will help other judges decide future cases, otherwise the case could be settled in the lower courts
The worldview of Sikhism is similar to the Hindu philosophical school called <u>Sankhya.</u>
One of the more modern religions, Sikhism or Sikh Dharma, was born in the Punjab region of the Indian subcontinent towards the end of the 15th century CE.
With over 25–30 million adherents as of the early 21st century, it ranks as the fifth-largest significant organized religion in the world and is the most recent to be established.
The spiritual teachings of Guru Nanak (1469–1539), the faith's founding guru, and the nine Sikh gurus who followed him, served as the foundation for the development of Sikhism.
The Sikh text Guru Granth Sahib was designated as the tenth guru by Gobind Singh (1666–1708), ending the line of human gurus and designating it as the last eternally living guru and a source of religious inspiration for Sikhs.
Hence, option A is correct.
To learn more about Sikhism here
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Answer: analogies
Explanation:
An analogy is a comparison in which an idea or a thing is compared to another thing that is quite different from it. It aims at explaining that idea or thing by comparing it to something that is familiar.