Question:
"<em>These natural laws are incontrovertible; . . . Those who resist them will be wiped out. Biology not only tells us about animals and plants, but also shows us the laws we must follow in our lives, and steels our wills to live and fight according to these laws. The meaning of all life is struggle.
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<em>The excerpt above is an example of a false dilemma. Which of the following choices explains the logical fallacy in this excerpt, as well as the reason it fails to prove its point?"</em>
I think your answer would be:
- D. The excerpt contains no logical fallacies but uses true statements to persuade the audience of life’s common struggle.
Answer:
Grant political asylum
This is in response to the news titled “Rizal yet to get travel documents” dated March 17. It is unfortunate that Tek Nath Rizal, known as the father of the Bhutanese democracy movement, could not go to Geneva to attend the UN Commission for Human Rights meeting as the Nepal government could not provide him with necessary travel documents. He and two other Bhutanese human rights activists were invited by Lutheran World Federation. Nepal has not granted him political asylum till date for which he had applied in October last year. It sounds mysterious why Nepal deliberately fails to do so if it sincerely wants to solve the long protracted crisis. Granting Rizal the refugee status and travel document would not add any extra burden for Nepal, rather it would unleash Nepal from the burden of raising their concerns in the international arena. Who else could present the concerns and problems of the refugees better than Rizal?
Answer:
In "A Doll's House," by Henrik Ibsen, Nora asks for the lamp, whose artificial light suggests that secrets are being revealed. For instance, Dr Rank's feelings for Nora should have been kept undisclosed, since she is a married woman. Consequently, truth and light are closely related in the novel, in which the characters possess confidential matters hidden that are eventually exposed.
Answer:
Between that time Alabama had witnessed bombings in Birmingham and there was a face off between Wallace and Federal Forces over the matter of the University of Alabama.
Explanation:
George Corley Wallace was born on 25th August 1919. He was a supporter of the Jim Crow laws of segregation. In 1962, Wallace was selected for governor and took his governorship on the promise of keeping with segregation and economic issues. According to the author, when in 1958, Wallace stood against John Patterson, he denied using segregation and race as a tool but after realizing the power of this tool he supported it when he again stood for the election in 1962. In his governance, he denied the enrollment of black students at the University of Alabama.
<u>On 15th September 1963, Birmingham witnessed bombings at the Street Baptist Church that killed four young girls and left many injured. The church was the congregation of black people and also a place where civil rights leaders would gather. There was a face-off between Wallace and Federal forces during that time.</u>