Answer:
(D) the nobles' suspicions about him.
(D) inexperience in crime.
Explanation:
52. Although the passage is not included, we can still analyze what Macbeth's main worries were when initially planning his murderous plot. Macbeth is worried about his guilt being revealed eventually. He also worries about Macduff betraying him, being punished for the murders and the supernatural events that keep happening about him. However, he is never particularly concerned with the nobles' suspicions about him.
53. Macbeth attributes his strange behaviour to his inexperience in crime. Macbeth believes that the difficulty he has in carrying out a crime, dealing with his guilt and behaving normally is a consequence of the fact that he had never engaged in crime before. He believes that soon, such a situation will hold less power over him and he will be able to go "back to normal."
Student:
While society may broadly appreciate and desire educational objectives that can help people lead healthy lives, the exact approaches necessary to reach these desired outcomes are not well understood. Mandigo and Anderson (2003) highlight the need for educators "to develop ways to foster these skills and understandings across numerous types of activities" (p. 8) as an important step towards making this desire a reality.
Which of the following is true for the Student Version above?
A. Word-for-Word plagiarism
B. Paraphrasing plagiarism
C. This is not plagiarism
Answer: THIS IS NOT PLAGIARISM.
Explanation: Plagiarism is the use of someones literature work without acknowledging the person. It is a theft of knowledge in it's simplest term. But when acknowledged it is assumed to be a borrow of knowledge, which is always acceptable because no one knows everything.
The student has acknowledged the source that was cited to build it's literature work, so therefore it is legal for the student to copy as much information from the book, be it paraphrasing of Word-for-word.
Answer: C. This is not Plagiarism.
Explanation: In the student version, he or she neither copied the original content word for word without enclosing them in a quotation marks nor copied the structure of the statement.
The student kept the original meaning without copying word for word as well as the structure.
Also he cited and enclosed the the statement he copied to show he just borrowed them and it was his or her original idea. So this is not Plagiarism
A. The South won the battle.
B. Both sides suffered heavy casualties.
C. The North won the battle.
D. The battle was a turning point in the war.
Answer:
Both sides suffered heavy casualties.
Explanation:
Took the test !
b) The Earth revolves on its axis and rotates around the Sun
c) The Earth rotates on its axis and revolves around the Sun.
d) The Earth rotates on its axis and revolves around the Moon.
Answer:
C
Explanation:
The earth rotate on its axis and revolves around the sun
pleasure
suffering
Love
Question 22 (2 points)
Thomas Aquinas accepted Platonic dualism.
True
False
Question 23 (2 points)
Thomas Aquinas divided knowledge into two spheres. That of faith and that of reason.
True
False
Big Question 25 (3 points)
The idea that God must exist because the universe is orderly but could not have produced that order itself (and is therefore made orderly by an intelligent being) is known as the _____ argument for God.
Pathological
Oderian
Teleological
Encyclial
Question 26 (2 points)
The rediscovery of the works of Aristotle had a major impact on late Medeival thought.
True
False
Question 27 (3 points) Augustine got many of his ideas about how God illuminated the universe from his interpretation of the works of _______.
Aristotle
Zeno
Epictus
plato
Question 28 (3 points)
The idea that the simplest explanation of something is usually the best is known as _____.
Zeno's Paradox
Augustine's Razor
Hubble's Law
Ockham's Razor
Question 29 (2 points) Augustine separated the fallen "City of Man" (sometimes called the "City of the World") from the perfect "City of God."
True
False
Question 30 (3 points) Anselm's idea that if people can concieve of God, a perfect being who exists (because existence is a prerequisite of perfection), therefore God must exist is known as the ______ for God's existence.
Ontological
Confrontational
Teleological
Illogical
Question 31 (2 points)
One of the defining debates of Medeival Philosophy is that between the superiority of faith versus reason.
True
False
Epicureans identify good with pleasure and with the absence of pain from the body and the soul.
Plato believed that the essence of a human being was the soul, that is to say, a person is essentially his/her soul. He thought the body as a mere instrument of the soul. On the other hand, Aquinas thought, taking into account the Christian Dogma of Resurrection in which humans resurrect in their corporeal forms, body and soul go hand in hand, meaning that the soul becomes the substantial form that leads the body to perform its actions.
Aquinas perceives reason and faith as two types of knowledge. Reason refers to what people can know by experience and logic alone. Therefore, human beings can know that there is a God and that there is only one God. Faith refers to what people can know by God's revelation to us, through the Bible, for instance. Christans believe God is triune (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit) and these truths about God can't be known without faith. In sum, faith and reason are two ways of arriving at truth.
The teleological argument (term derived from "telos", the Greek word for "goal" or "purpose") also known as the argument from design is an argument for an intelligent creator or God. These arguments attempt to identify various empirical features of the world that are evidence of intelligent design and claiming God's existence as the best explanation for these features.
The Scholastics, like Thomas Aquinas or Roger Bacon, transformed the intellectual and cultural environment of Europe in the Middle Ages, influenced by the rediscovery of the works of Aristotle, who believed that the material world was not inferior. The Scholastics' work laid the foundation for huge changes such as the Reinassence and the Scientific Revolution.
Plato's theory of recollection alludes that the human mind somehow has built into it an understanding of the Forms, meaning that at some point the soul must have received some kind of illumination. Medieval philosophers from Agustine on, would take this idea into account for further development.
Occam's razor is the problem-solving principle, specially in philosophy, that refers to the idea that the simplest solution tends to be the right one. In other words, the more assumptions or guesses you make, the more unlikely to have an explanation.
Augustine uses the term "city" to refer to "society". The City of Man, according to Augustine, is based on man self-love . This kind of love is one that is egocentric and egoistic. It expresses the will to absolute autonomy in rebel against the theonomous and theocentric love of God. On the other hand, The City of God refers to heaven, which is the perfect city, where the church is the kingdom of Christ.
The main purpose of Anselm's ontological argument is to provide a proof of God's existence. Anselm relies on an assumption that does not depend on experience for its justification, that is a priori, and then uses logical means to come to the conclusion that God exists.
The Medieval philosophers are characterized for discussing ideas such us the superiority of faith versus reason, the good and evil as well as the existence of God.
21.). Pleasure
22.) False
23.) True
24.). Not included in the questions
25.). Telelological
26.). True
27.). Plato
28.). Okham's Razor
29.). True
30.). Ontological
31.). True
I hope these helps.
Answer:
Yes it is outdated. (True)
Explanation: