The legend, or key, is used to display what stuff means on the map. This makes it easier to spot, rivers, capitols, parks, hospitals and everything else that the map might be centralized upon. Its basically your guide to reading the map and its markings. <span />
Answer:
a Self-fullfiling prophecy.
Explanation:
Self-fulfilling prophecies are psychological phenomena in which individuals predict an event, and due to their conscious or unconscious behavior, said event ends up happening.
For instance, Jim has a physics exam in two weeks. The exam is about thermodynamics, a topic that James dislikes because he doesn't understand it. After hearing the news that the exam was coming, he immediately claims that he was going to fail the exam. Out of resignation, he thinks: why bother studying, I'm not good at thermodynamics, and even though he may not realize it, he is setting himself up to fail. The day of the exam comes, and because he did not study one bit during the last two weeks, he loses the exam.
In this particular case, Marcus has a big wrestling match coming up, but he fears that he will lose. The week before the match, he claims that he is "really busy with other studies," and does not practice at all. Even though he may not realize he is doing this, he is setting himself up so that he will have an "excuse" in case he loses the match. Marcus is apparently engaging in a self-fullfilling prophecy.
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Answer:
4. Suspension of disbelief
Explanation:
a) Group dynamic: Has to do with the processes that happen inside a group.
b) Aesthetic distance: refers to the gap between a viewer's conscious reality and the fictional reality presented. When the viewer fully engages with the character, there is a short aesthetic distance.
c) Art detachment: Refers to the process by which actors detach from themselves to become the character they are representing.
d) Suspension of disbelief: Is the process by which the viewer accept for true what is going on in the fictional reality represented even if it's weird, crazy or doesn't make much sense.
In this example, <u>we know that what's happening in stage is not real but we agree to accept the play's quasi-reality</u>. Therefore this is the notion of <u>suspension of disbelief</u>. <u>We agree to believe what the play is presenting us. </u>