Answer:
a) id
Explanation:
According to the psychoanalytic theory, our personality is made of 3 different structures:
- The id is the part of our personality we are born with. It focuses in instant gratification and is driven by impulses and in-the-moment-needs.
 - The superego is the part of our personality that corresponds to our "conscience", it is the internalization of social norms and tells us what's wrong.
 - The ego is the mediator between these two structures, is in charge of taking decisions and satisfy either the id or the superego.
 
Therefore, we can see that the part of the personality that strives for immediate gratification of basic drives is the Id. 
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
Explanation:
<u>Social service organizations are the ones that are most likely to detect the problem in society and analyze how it should be approached.</u> They will see what are the priorities of the community, what can be approved, and what are the actions that need to take place in order for a certain problem to be solved. 
<u>Organizations know the governmental, civil, and law procedures that need to take place to make the change.</u> <u>They usually already have some support of governmental bodies, employees, and volunteers who can work on the issue. </u>
Therefore, social service organizations are more likely to get into the process of solution and guide the social transformation through it.
 
        
             
        
        
        
<span>A Christian worldview has the stamp of reason and reality and can stand the test both of history and experience.  Every chapter in this book is predicated on a Christian view of things, a view of the world which cannot be infringed upon, or accepted or rejected piecemeal, but stands or falls in its integrity.  Such a wholistic approach offers a stability of thought, a unity of comprehensive insight which bears not only on the religious sphere, but on the whole of thought.  A Christian worldview is not built on two types of truth (religious and philosophical or scientific), but on a universal principle and all-embracing system that shapes religion, natural and social sciences, law, history, healthcare, the arts, the humanities, and all disciplines of study with application for all of life. </span>