The right answer is C: Participating in an interest group. An interest, lobby or advocacy group consists of an organized group of people that, seeking a common public interest, get together and work jointly in order to advocate for and pursue that interest before the authorities.
Answer:
Get started
Open in app
How Photography Became an Art Form
Can Computers Create Art? Part 1
Aaron Hertzmann
Aaron Hertzmann
Jul 23, 2018·9 min read
This is the first part of a series of posts on the topic of whether computers can create art, adapted from my longer essay on that topic. For lessons from the past about AI and art, perhaps no invention is more significant than photography. This first essay addresses the question: How did photography become respected as an art form, and what lessons does this hold for new artistic AI technologies?
Prior to the invention of photography, realistic images of the world could only be produced by skilled artists. In today’s world, we are so swamped with images that it is hard to imagine just how special and unique it must have felt to see a well-executed realistic painting. And the skills of professional artists had steadily improved over the centuries; by the 19th-century, artists such as the Pre-Rafaelites and the French Neoclassicists have achieved dazzling visual realism in their work.
The technical skills of realism were inseparable from the other creative challenges in making images. This changed when photography automated the task of producing images of the real world.
Explanation:
mark as brainliiest please
They were the founders of democracy and they held meatings to vote for things and thats where we get the elections from
Monotheistic - the def is belief in only one God, as is proven in Christianity (read the story of Abraham and the covenent if you need more help!).
Answer:
D. Oxygen
Explanation:
Food molecules are broken down by reacting with oxygen. Just like burning the candle in oxygen. Cells also carry out reactions that join together monomers such as amino acids, sugars, nucleotides, etc., to form long polymer chains.