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suter [353]
3 years ago
13

What is the difference between prudential and moral reasons?

History
2 answers:
denis23 [38]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

Prudential Reasons for power sharing is based on careful calculation of losses and gains. The Moral reasons for power sharing is based on moral considerations and it has nothing to do with careful calculation of losses and gains.

stira [4]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:What is the difference between prudential and moral reasons for power sharing? Prudential Reasons for power sharing is based on careful calculation of losses and gains. The Moral reasons for power sharing is based on moral considerations and it has nothing to do with careful calculation of losses and gains.

Explanation:

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nydimaria [60]

Answer:

= BC ✓

Explanation:

= Everything is good its just that as a believer wound not say God before doesn't forgive people only since jesus come. To be honest to you. You know who is God for real he always forgive when you repent. And for those who believe in that way is guide you know , even muslim or Jewish believe, if you believe in God and do good and if have make any mistake and repent. Your save. Just like the pass too. Just don't do bad and that's it. And also to know if believe in God have to know that we need him. Because we are weak because humans makes mistakes , maybe on madness shout to people and so on.

May God solve all your challenges of life, put smile on your face, joy in your heart and May God protect you from enemies that may appear to you as friends and May God kindness and mercy be with you and your entire family now and always. Aamin.

3 0
2 years ago
What was the purpose of herodotus'history?
Debora [2.8K]
Herodotus is famously known by the dual moniker, “Father of History, Father of Lies”. Whether or not he deserves the latter epithet is perhaps up for debate. He is sometimes criticized as unserious for his many cultural digressions and travelog sidebars. It would, however, take a truly obtuse and narrow-minded critic to deny him the former title. History as a thing separate from record-keeping and chronicling begins with Herodotus. In and among his entertaining and diverting rabbit trails is some of the best and most important history ever written. He shows those who would do history after him what they were to strive for. It is in the opening lines of the Histories where Herodotus establishes the scope and purpose of history, and in doing so establishes its role in man’s attempt to understand his world.

The lines which begin the Histories are a model of clarity and simplicity. There is no excess rhetoric, no flowery overstatement. Herodotus states succinctly in the above passage the purpose for his account. His “enquiries” (ἱστορία) were made to serve memory and understanding—memory in preserving the deeds of men, understanding in examining how the circumstances of those actions came about.

Herodotus’ treatment of memory in this passage is more than just a simple remembrance. He is doing more than just recording a how, where, and when. The preservation of memory here is active, even aggressive, as if time were attempting to destroy the things of man, and history is a brandished weapon holding it at bay.

Almost as an afterthought, Herodotus appends onto his paean to memory a secondary goal. Among the matters covered will be “…the cause of the conflict between the Greeks and non-Greeks.” This is just casually thrown in as if to remind you to look for it along the way. Here Herodotus is understating his purpose, and by playing down this item, he shows its importance. The discovery of the causes of action, and why men have acted as they have, is the heart of the study of history.

So what is the cause of the conflict between the Greeks and the non-Greeks? What was the spark that began the fire that led the largest army in antiquity to cross from Asia to Europe in order to subdue the cities of Attica and the Peloponnese? Herodotus’ examination of this is more subtle than some will give him credit for, and is composed of one part scholarly guile, and one part showmanship. He will look at the opinions of the Asians and the Greeks, and then settle on the pattern that will lead him through his entire enquiry.

“According to learned Persians, it was the Phoenicians who caused the conflict....”1 So begins Herodotus’ examination of the causes of the great conflict. Right away, he is already showing historians their business - he is sourcing his work. He is telling you whose opinion he is working with. As he proceeds, he relates the Persians’ story of Phoenicians going to Argos and abducting Io. In a turnabout, some Greeks go to Tyre and abduct Europa, while some others go to Colchis and abduct Princess Medea (there is some confusion amongst the Persians as to whether the former group were properly Greek, or Cretan). All of the second round of abductors justify their actions by pointing to Io’s earlier capture.

Finally, the son of the Trojan king, Alexander (Paris), abducts Helen from her home in Sparta. At this point, according to the Persians, the Greeks gain culpability, for “…so far it had only been a matter of abducting women from one another, but the Greeks…took the initiative and launched a military strike against Persia.”2

While it is true that the Persians viewed this kind of rapacious activity to be illegal, they found the Greek reaction to Helen’s abduction odd because, “…it is stupid to get worked up about it....“ They viewed the Greek reaction to be unjust and “…date the origin of their hostility towards the Greece from the fall of Illium.” 3

After sourcing these opinions, and running through them, Herodotus gives his own opinion: forget the abductions; they are not the issue.


3 0
3 years ago
Which of the following caused the development of both feudalism and manorialism? (4 points)
ch4aika [34]

Answer:

The decline of the Roman Empire

Explanation:

The reason for the development of both feudalism and manorialism were both caused by the decline of the Roman Empire.

Manorialism and Feudalism are similar concepts based on land tenure system and land distribution among lord and vassal or subjects.

It was developed during the decline of Rome as an empire and at a time when countries were becoming more centralized.

3 0
3 years ago
Eyes on the prize questions 1. what did thurgood marshall (who would later become a supreme court justice) mean when he said "90
slega [8]
Answer 1. He said that over 90 years had passed since the emancipation proclamation and that he believed in gradualism. People claimed that you can't just delete all prejudice over night and he explained that he believed in gradual change as well and that 90 years is pretty gradual because things should have changed since then and went for the better.

Answer 2. Autherine Lucy was expelled from the University of Alabama where she had previously been enrolled because the board of trustees didn't want her due to her race. When she sued them and they had to take her back, they made her expulsion permanent because of a technicality in which they stated that she slandered the University.

Answer 3. It gave the desegregation movements and civil rights movements more power because that was just another example of racial inequality and extreme racism in the country. These kinds of events only strengthened them and took them to the 60s when they finally managed to win their rights through the civil rights act.
8 0
3 years ago
After Christianity received acceptance within the Roman Empire, churches were constructed above the catacombs. Which of the foll
Rasek [7]

Answer:

c. all churches had to be constructed outside the city walls

Explanation:

3 0
3 years ago
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