Answer:
Joyce is most likely to be motivated by her love/belonging needs.
Explanation:
According to psychologist Abraham Maslow, people are motivated by their needs. Those needs have a certain hierarchy, the most basic (even primitive) ones being fulfilled before the most developed ones. They follow the sequence below:
1. physiological;
2. safety;
3. love/belonging;
4. esteem;
5. self-actualization.
Therefore, only when our physiological needs are satisfied (breathing, eating, drinking water, etc.) is that we are driven by our need for safety. <u>When both, our physiological needs and safety needs, are met, we are motivated by our love/belonging needs. That is the current need that motivates Joyce, since the previous two have been met.</u> Once she feels loved (by family/friends), once she has a sense of belonging, she will be motivated by her needs of esteem, and so on.
I believe the answer is A.More is thy due than more than all pay but i am not 100% sure so if this is wrong I am truly sorry.
This question is about "The crucible".
Answer and Explanation:
Theocracy is the basis for all administrative and governmental decisions in the whole plot of "The Crucible". In this case, it is believed that the existence of "witches" is causing problems in the city. It is the government's responsibility to end the city's problems, in this case, the theocratic government, like the one in history, seeks to resolve them with teligious justifications.
Although all the characters show theocracy's effects on their personalities, the ones who show this most clearly are those who have government and religious influence in the city, such as Reverend Parris, Herrick, Judge Hathorne and Judge Danforth.