Hello.
The best answer would be D.
Have a nice day
Answer: Broadsides
Don't have too much context on Art Appreciation for me to give you an eloquent explanation on that one. Sorry haha
This statement most likely comes from the background research (OPTION B) of the student´s lab report. Since from the information obtained a priori he considers that it could be deepen with further research to finally be able to establish what are the colors to attract the butterflies.
Answer:
Explanation:
1. What ties linked Kiev to Byzantium? Trade and religion
2. How did Vladimir and his son Yaroslav contribute to the power of Kiev? . Yaroslav the wise married off his daughters and sisters to princes in the area to increase trade.; Vladimir expanded Russia to Poland and expanded to the Baltic sea.
3. What factors brought about Kiev’s decline? The death of Yaroslav; before he died , he did not name nor appoint a successor; Mongol
4. How did the Mongols treat the Russian people?After the Mongol Invasion of Russia in the 13th Century, they demanded slavish obedience and massive amounts of tribute from them(tax payments) and lastly they allowed princes to rule, and such princes to be tolerant towards religion
5. What were some effects of Mongol rule
The effect were both political and economic in nature as it was social and spiritual; they isolated russia from western europe with no access to new ideas or inventions
6. What events marked the beginning of an independent Russian Empire?
Czar Ivan bloodless standoff when he refused to pay tribute to the Mongols
1. Circulus in demonstrando: Also known as circular reasoning because the reasoning assumes the conclusion is true.
2. Argumentum ad populum: Sometimes occurs due to “peer pressure” or groupthink phenomenon when you may be influenced to conform to the opinion of the group.
3. Single cause/complex cause: a causal situation where we are unsure of the actual root cause of the issue. It’s possible to ignore a possible cause or to incorrectly assume a common cause.
4. Red herring: this argument states that the action (or conclusion) is a justified response to another wrong action (or conclusion)
5. Argument from ignorance: this occurs when there is no real evidence for the argument. Superstitions are a good example of this.
6. False dilemma: the “either/or” fallacy – the argument presents only two extreme alternatives and does not allow for alternative options.
7. Association fallacy: indicates that one negative action will lead to another, and then another worse one, and so on and so forth all leading to a terrible end result