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.
A is the actually correct answer
In this scene Odysseus is debating whether or not to kill the serving-women, who he greatly disdains. He calls on his heart to restrain his desire urge to kill them, citing the incident with the Cyclops as evidence that he has borne worse.
The best answer is <span>Odysseus is restraining himself from killing the serving-women. </span>
Answer: The answer is B
Explanation:
As children get older, they go to bed later. Yet, their classes begin earlier. As a result, they are increasingly sleep deprived.