The correct answer "All of the Above".
Charlemagne, who at the time was King of the Franks and Lombards, was crowned as the First Holy Roman Emperor in the year 800 AD by Pope Leo III on Saint Peter's Basilica on December 25th. All of the following rulers who succeeded him considered themselves as descendants of Charlemagne's empire.
Under his rule, he united much of western Europe under the Christian Faith. This was considered a time of great cultural and intellectual development in the Empire.
Answer:
The actual answer was: Which statements are examples of Charlemagne’s achievements?
Choose all answers that are correct.
united a vast realm under the Christian faith
became the first emperor of the Holy Roman Empire
Explanation:
I took the test
-Kuomintang
-Sun Yat-sen
-Chiang Kai-shek
isolationism
pacification
appeasement
The correct answer is: "Domino theory"
The Domino theory emerged and spread during the 1950s and 1960s. It firmly believed that, when a region fell under communist influence, soon nearby regions would follow the same direction, causing a sort of domino effect. This argument was used by the US goverment to justify its interventions in third countries and proxy wars (such as the Vietnam conflict), during the Cold War era. US leaders often said they did so to prevent that a certain country, and in turn its whole region, would fall under the influence of the URSS.
Answer:
Many items were traded between North Africa and West Africa, but the two goods that were most in demand were gold and salt. The North Africans wanted gold, which came from the forest region south of Ghana. The people in the forests wanted salt, which came from the Sahara.
horses
dogs
guinea pigs
B. Descartes
C. Kant
D. Locke
Answer:
C. Kant
Explanation:
Immanuel Kant tries to make a synthesis that would make universal and necessary scientific knowledge possible but whose truths were not merely formal and analytical but could be material, trying to justify the possibility and existence of a priori synthetic judgments, which would be the judgments of science: Universal and necessary, for being a priori, but synthetic because they extend the knowledge in its material content by extending the possible predicates regardless of the subject's notion, overcoming the limitations of the truths of reason.
To justify such judgments, he rejects that the understanding is like a "tabula rasa" that is limited to passively receiving the information that arrives from the sensitive data, in the same way that it rejects the intuition capacity of the understanding.
On the contrary, he says that understanding is active. He believes that intuition is given by sensitivity and that the concepts are the elaboration of one's understanding and serve as a justification for scientific knowledge. At the same time, from these non-empirical conditions, a priori, the general conditions of the experience can be determined, which allows the prediction and scientific forecast in the domain of nature