Jean-Jacques Rousseau, because he believed that the education is a basics of everything.
Explanation:
- He believed that modern culture was a negation of nature, and therefore he said that people should return to nature - freedom and equality.
- For Rousseau, inequality arose with private property and the state contracted. For Jean Jacques Rousseau education was the cornerstone of society.
- Rousseau's immense influence is that he was the first true philosopher of Romanticism. It mentions for the first time many of the themes that dominated intellectual life for the next hundred years, such as: elevating feelings and innocence and diminishing the importance of the intellect; lost unity of human race and nature; a dynamic conception of human history and its various levels; belief in theology and the possibility of restoring extinct freedom.
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Theme Setting I grew up in a faraway country of trolls and falries. SETTING
I learned that we all have our own strengths, we can rely on and use to help others. THEME
I found myself face to face with my worst enemy. CONFLICT
America."
<span>As the nation developed, it expanded westward from small settlements along the Atlantic Coast, eventually including all the territory between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans across the middle of the North American continent, as well as two noncontiguous states and a number of territories. At the same time, the population and the economy of the United States grew and changed dramatically. The population diversified as immigrants arrived from all countries of the world. From its beginnings as a remote English colony, the United States has developed the largest economy in the world. Throughout its history, the United States has faced struggles, both within the country—between various ethnic, religious, political, and economic groups—and with other nations. The efforts to deal with and resolve these struggles have shaped the United States of America into the late 20th century</span>
No, he did not.
his wives were Caroline Harper Means and Martha Caroline Means, a cousin of his first wife. His wifes were one or six years younger than he was, so they could not possibly be his daughters.