In the civil disobedience excerpt by Thoreau, the way that he supported his claim was by the use of: reasoning, showing the logical consequences of supporting a cause that is wrong.
<h3>How does Thoreau show reasoning?</h3>
According to him he is trying to say that people should be more obedient to a higher law and not just a civil law.
He tries to speak to the conscience and the fact that human law is not bigger than one's conscience.
Read more on civil disobedience here: brainly.com/question/325929
I just reply to someone else like this is ado point of view, setting and perspective
Answer:
Explanation:
Macbeth and Lady Macbeth's initial decision to murder Duncan brings them close together as partners in crime, but the consequences of this act ultimately drive them apart. Macbeth is initially unsure about murdering the king, while Lady Macbeth confidently and eagerly urges her husband to accomplish the deed. After the murder, however, Lady Macbeth's guilt drives her insanity, while Macbeth becomes increasingly willing to kill any who oppose him.
It's not healthy it looks like he eats too much. He is 15 but his weight doesn't match how old he is. He needs to take a diet
<span>From the speech's of Kennedy "We Choose to go to the Moon", he gave the listener the importance of humanity's capability, curiosity and persistence. IF one man can do it it, that he s capable to go to the man, it goes to show that any man can do it, not in the sense that they can go to the moon but in the sense that they Americans can do if one must persevere.</span>