<u>Answer:
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After the fall of Sadducees, Judaism changed as the worship, prayers, and related practices started taking place in synagogues and not temples.
<u>Explanation:
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- The comparatively new form of Judaism that came to surface gradually after the fall of Sadducees came to be known as Rabbinic Judaism.
 - After the second temple of Jews was destroyed, they accepted the reality and continued their worships and prayers through synagogues in line with the practice that the Jews who were exiled from Babylonia followed.
 
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer: television is an attention grabber it’s loud, it’s colorful, and it’s distracting.
Explanation: The reason for this is our brains process information but not all of us have a great attention span for instance those of us who have watched TV often enough will begin to mimic things we see on TV we store that information into our brain for longer than we would if someone had just explained it face-to-face. The reason for this is our brains process information but not all of us have a great attention span for instance those of us who’ve watched TV often enough will begin to mimic things we see on TV we store that information into our brain for longer than we would if someone had just explained it face-to-face 
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
B) the two factor theory.
Explanation:
When Amir took his first ride on the big ferris wheel, he looked down at the fairground 100 feet below and became aware of his high level of physiological arousal. Suddenly he felt frightened. The sequence of events in Amir's emotional experience reflects THE TWO FACTOR THEORY
 
        
             
        
        
        
Turkey, leaves, orange, yellow, feast, thankfulness, and family
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
The best answer to the question: Theo would be considered to be a(n) ___ relativist, would be, D: Individual.
Explanation:
Relativism, especially in ethics, means that the understanding of what is right, vs what is wrong, will be relative to certain factors, be them societal, cultural, or individual. The opposite of this would be to accept that ethical values and principles are not dependent on changing, or relative to changing, factors, but are a set of standards that are universal and unmovable. However, Theo not only holds his ethical values relative to what he believes, which is that each person is responsible for developing his/her own ethical rules, but furthermore he understands that each person may judge a situation or a circumstance, under the light of such a personal set of beliefs. Thus, Theo does not believe in universal standards of ethical behavior, but on ethical principles dictated by personalized and individualized views. This is why he would be considered an individual relativist.