Answer:
Alienation, simplicity, and labor.
Explanation:
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In "Adrift in a Moral Sea," Garrett argues that a wealthy country is similar to a lifeboat that holds 50 people with capacity to hold 10 more, but is faced with 100 additional people who need to be saved. His argument is that the lifeboat will sink if the boat exceeds capacity, and that even maximum capacity is too much of a risk.
While I believe it is possible for a country to "sink" if too much help is given, there are other means to help other than "letting people onto the lifeboat." While it is a good example, it is oversimplified. This argument is against giving handouts, or doing anything that would put a current wealthy country at risk, but it doesn't provide another alternative other than ignore the crisis.
<span>Stories generally provide entertainment, but some have morals embedded in them. In such cases, the writer's purpose is to instruct the audience, not just enthrall them. These stories are also known as didactic tales. To "instruct" means to tell how to do something, which the story aims to and when something is "didactict", it aims to teach something.</span>
Answer:
A tentative explanation for an observation or phenomenon that can be tested by further investigation or experimentation is defined as a <u>hypothesis</u>.