He believed that people should be guided by their conscious
Part A: The statement that best states a central idea of this text is the second option: "When helping others, it is important to act; words alone are not enough."
The first option ("Good people volunteer...") is incorrect because the text makes no generalizations about good people at all; the third option ("In times of crisis...") is incorrect because the interaction between older and younger people in the text is not relevant; the fourth option ("Most people...") is incorrect because the person who needs help in the text is not a stranger, but a friend.
Part B: The essential detail from the text that helps to shape the central idea in Part A is the fact that, despite receiving over fifty messages in social networks offering support (words), Martin and his father were actually only visited by Jerome that day (actions).
Answer:
There are several kinds of arguments in logic, the best-known of which are "deductive" and "inductive."
Explanation:
There are several kinds of arguments in logic, the best-known of which are "deductive" and "inductive." An argument has one or more premises but only one conclusion. Each premise and the conclusion are truth bearers or "truth-candidates", each capable of being either true or false (but not both).
The line that signifies the narrator's turn from unfavorable to favorable descriptions of the "dark lady" is D. "And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare."
The other options describe her as nothing special to the author - he is saying that her voice is horrible, that her eyes are ugly, and that she walks really loudly. But the last line states that he loves her no matter what, despite her flaws of which there are many.