I believe the answer is: Iconoclasts
Iconoclasts tend to see that religious images in the place of worship is an insult to the God because we falsely interpret the true image of God without having any knowledge about it. This view tend to be held by the Christian who adopt the orthodox' / traditional religion.
Cold and it is harder to breathe
It might begin to flatten or rip apart. it's like grabbing a football by each end and tearing and pulling on it
Social stratification created a huge drift in the Roman society.
Explanation:
Roman people never equal social strata. some were inferior while some were superior. Social categories were based on money, power and authority. An upper class Roman child may enjoy all comforts but the lower class Roman child will satisfy its hunger by eating bread made of cheap flour. Plebeians were common people in Rome. Kids of Plebeians never went to school and the women had no rights in ancient Rome.
Patricians are people who belonged to noble family. Kids of Patricians went to school. They were taught by their parents or an educated slave, The poor worked very hard to make both ends meet. Another very important part was a trip to the baths, even on holy days, but the baths were only for Patricians.
This is an example of kohlberg's individualism, instrumental purpose, and exchange stage of moral development.
These kids are in the <u>preconventional level</u>, where their sense of morality is externally controlled. They accept and believe the rules of authority figures, such as parents and teachers. A child with pre-conventional morality has not yet adopted or internalized society’s conventions regarding what is right or wrong, but instead focuses largely on external consequences that certain actions may bring. In this particular example they are in the <u>Stage 2: Instrumental Orientation</u>. The reasoning shows a limited interest in the needs of others, only to the point where it might further the individual’s own interests. As a result, concern for others is not based on loyalty or intrinsic respect, but rather a “you scratch my back, and I’ll scratch yours” mentality.