Answer:
Conflict can always be resolved.
Explanation:
Hadley and Weston are planning their son's first birthday party and are inviting both extended families to celebrate. Just as expected, Hadley's mom declines her invitation because she dislikes some of Weston's relatives and refuses to see them. Hadley and Weston are upset and frustrated that her mother won't be there, but they do not wish to change their party plans.
Hadley and Weston need to overcome misconception that conflict can always be resolved.
Answer: B
Explanation: The correct answer is letter B, desorginized thinking. This symptom is very common in patients with schizophrenia and it is described as the impossibility of the patient to make sense of their speech and being unable to follow through a same topic while speaking.
In this case, the person jumps from bees to flies altering the understanding of the phrase.
Answer:
The correct answer is Obliteration
Explanation:
Obliteration means eradication, erasure.
Something that is obliterated means that it is gone.
In sociology, the word obliteration can take many connotations, one of them being cultural obliteration.
Cultural obliteration usually occurs when a person moves to a country that has a cultural context that they are not used to but end up adapting said culture. What happens with their original cultural identity is known as Obliteration. It can also happen when a person adopts their partners' cultural identity while sacrificing their own.
In this particular case, Keiko grew in Japan and Wahid in Egypt.
They got married in the United States and they decided to stay there and "become American" rather than negotiate the differences between their two cultures. This scenario exemplifies obliteration.
Answer:
Public Behavior
Explanation:
Public behavior occurs in a place where one does not reasonably expect privacy. The riders here are observed on public streets. These observations are public behavior.
If the observation and recording of similar information occurred in a private training facility it could be considered private behavior and private information.
Examples of public information would be donor lists in a concert program or names and addresses in telephone directories.
Private information includes information that occurs in a context in which an individual can reasonably expect that no observation or recording is taking place.