Answer:
d. the person
Explanation:
The real psychological, and then societal and cultural, implication of one's death is the leave of the person and the vacancy they leave in the society's structure.
<u>Each person has it's own place in the structure of the family, neighborhood, job, etc. and with death, the rest must learn how to cope with their leave and continue without implications.</u>
It is also notable that the body in most of the cultures is just the symbol of the person, while the real person is connected to their social role, identity and behavior, which they fulfill and have while alive. This is why in many cultures the death of the brain is taken as the "real" and legal death - <u>only the leave of the person's identity, social role and function is really what the environment misses with one's death.</u>
Answer:
are u an indian?i too am!
Explanation:
Kapilavastu was an ancient city on the Indian subcontinent which was the capital of the clan of the Shakyas. ... Kapilavastu is the place where Siddhartha Gautama spent 29 years of his life. According to Buddhist sources Kapilvastu was named after Vedic sage Kapila.
The appropriate response would be: tell
the guest that you cannot serve them any more alcohol and get help from the
guests' friends.
<span>Other
responses that would help are the following: </span>
<span>
</span>Offer the guest water or any drinks as an alternative of
alcohol.
<span>
</span>Try to get the guest to eat some food to delay the affects of the
alcohol.
<span>
</span>Make sure that the guest's friend can drive or if not, call a
taxi.
<span>Jerome's failure to retrieve his paper is analogous to the decay theory of forgetting, whereas Kaci's failure better resembles the interference theory. It is a decay theory because Jerome's term paper file in the computer was corrupted resulting in the loss of all his files including his paper whereas for Kaci, it is interference because her term paper was mixed with all the other documents in her hard drive.</span>
<span>Basic services such as electricity and energy, water and sanitation, refuse and waste removal are critical services to improve the lives of people. In South Africa government has committed to providing a basic amount of free water and electricity to poor people. Sanitation and waste removal will also be provided where it is possible</span>