The answer would most likely be D, access to productive resources. This was part of the reason that Japan became so aggressive during WWII is because they were expanding to gain resources seeing as how Japan is an island about the size of the state of Ohio. I hope this helps :)
<span>There is often reconciliation seen among the bonobos during and after conflicts for power and authority within the pods. The apes show many behaviors that are more closely attributed to humans than they would be to species that have an instinctual desire to soundly destroy other, competing members.</span>
Popularity of a certain music artist or genre of music and the subculture/generational kinds of people that support it, listen to it and love it. It’s a preferential type of situation. For example. Eminem will always be WAY more sought after than a band called “insane clown posse” or “meatloaf”
Hello!
The options are:
A) Conventional Behavior
B) Cultural Relativism
C) Post Conventional Behavior
D) Natural Rights
E) Pre Conventional Behavior
The answer is A) Conventional Behavior
The question is related to the Theory of Moral Development by Lawrence Kohlberg. In the Conventional Behavior stage, the individual tries to behave in the "socially expected" way. People who are in the Conventional Behavior stage consider extremely important to obey the law, as it is considered to keep the social order.
So, John, the school prefect, when finding his best friend, who is also the head prefect, breaking a school rule, said that he was sorry that he had to book him (his best friend) as he could not make any exceptions, the law is the same for everybody, is an example of Conventional Behavior.
Answer:
Stress hormones at the time of learning __<em>interferes</em>___ new memory formation; the presence of stress hormones at the time of recall _<em>impairs</em>____ retrieval of older memories.
Explanation:
When stressed, the human body produces some stress hormone. Some of these hormones can affect certain parts of the brain, interfering with the encoding of new memory, and inhibiting the recall of long term or older memories. An example of a stress hormone responsible for negatively affecting long-term, delayed recall memory is the cortisol, and the effect is usually felt at the hippocampus, prefrontal cortex and the amygdala.