I think that this means that not everyone has the same mentality, so therefore, the same event can mean different things to different people. For example, every person experiences life differently whether that be different cultures, environments, or religion. This all affects how a person develops moral, ethics and their thinking process. Also, people learn new things every day which can also influence their , already existing, mentality meaning "[their] response can change over time.
its not 200 words but i hope this helps :)
Answer:
I think is A. ."My only love, sprung from my only hate!"
Explanation: I was taking a quiz of it.
Pathos. The reasoning being, what each word means.
Ethos is essentially the evidence of a “professional,” like things that say “9/10 dentist’s recommend!” By claiming that other people, famous people and/or professionals agree with your statement, it becomes more convincing as a result.
Logos is things such as evidence— the way I remember it is, logos and logic. Statistics are a great example but anything using logic is logos.
Finally, Pathos is emotional. Using someone’s emotions as a convincing factor. Using the commercial example from before, you know those sad puppy dog commercials? “One cent a day can help feed this poor animal.” The entire point is to play with your emotions in order to convince you to pay. That makes it pathos.
So I’m this example this is pathos. You’re trying to make someone feel bad for “breaking your grandma’s heart.” You’re not saying, “your grandma agrees that it would break her heart,” or “your mom and dad both say it would upset grandma,” which would be ethos. You’re also not saying anything logical or statistical. This leaves pathos as your answer.
Hope this helps!
Answer:
Children can learn to help out by completing their chores.
Explanation:
"Their" specifies that it is plural which is also what "Children" specifies. If it were to be singular, you could put "A child can learn to help out by completing his or her chores."
I hope this helps :)
The Identity Status Theory comes from psychologist James Marcia. He studied a person's exploration and commitment in different aspects of their lives, then broke down a person's sense of identity into four Identity Statuses.
Identity diffusion occurs when someone doesn't have a sense of having choices. They are not attempting or willing to make a commitment and will avoid exploring their options.
Moratorium status is when someone is in crisis. They either don't have commitments or aren't quite sure what they are, however, they are exploring and are ready to make choices.
Achievement comes once a person has experienced and worked through a crisis. They've explored their identity and made commitments as to their identity.
Foreclosure status is when someone has committed and have not experienced an identity crisis or explored their options. Their role, values, or goals may be influenced to conform to other's expectations (for example, parent's choices for their future).
To match your identity status and examples, 1. Diffusion is A (no big changes, coasting along), 2. Moratorium is B (struggling how to respond, exploring options), 3. Achievement is C (thought about options, committed to choice), 4. Foreclosure is D (was and remaining a vegetarian).