Answer:
The invention of the printing press made information and new opportunity available to the masses.
Also,
Loss of trade routes due to widespread wars prompted exploration for new routes and opportunities.
Explanation:
Match each Post-Impressionist with one of his major works.
Van Gogh
?
The Starry Night
Seurat
?
A Sunday on La Grande
Jatte
Gauguin
?
Tahitian Women on the
Beach
Cézanne
?
Still Life with Apples and
Oranges
Answer:
Vincent Van Gogh - A Starry Night
The Starry Night is an Oil on Canvas painting by Van Gogh in 1889, a year after he had voluntarrily admitted himself into the Saint-Paul-de-Mausole lunatic asylum. It was inspired by the landscape from his viewpoint in his asylum room.
Georges Seurat - A Sunday on La Grande Jatte
Another Oil on Canvas painting, A Sunday on La Grande Jette was painted between 1884 to 1886. In it Georges Seuret depicted a people in a park in Paris with the River Seine bordering it.
Paul Gaugin - Tahitian Women on the
Beach
Painted in 1891, Tahitian Women on the beach is a painting of two women on a beach in the Island of Tahiti. It is currently located in Paris.
Paul Cézanne - Still Life with Apples and Oranges.
Hailed for the emotion it conveys, Still Life with Apples and Oranges was painted by Paul Cézanne in 1895. It currently resides in Paris at the Musee d'Orsay.
Answer:
Vincent Van Gogh - A Starry Night
Georges Seurat - A Sunday on La Grande Jatte
Paul Gaugin - Tahitian Women on the Beach
Paul Cézanne - Still Life with Apples and Oranges.
Explanation:
A P E X :)
By definition, art doesn’t include functional pieces that we use. A. True B. False
who is this guy? hurry this is my online school please hurry and answer!
According to Professor Sandel, if judgments about the good are unavoidable in debates about justice and rights, is it possible to reason about the good?
According to Professor Sandel, if judgments about the good are unavoidable in debates about justice and rights, is it possible to reason about the good?
a) If reasoning about the good means that contending parties must share a single rule or maxim or criterion for the good life, to which one can appeal in every disagreement about morality, then the answer is "Yes."
b) If reasoning about the good means that contending parties must share a single rule or maxim or criterion for the good life, to which one can appeal in every disagreement about morality, then the answer is "No."
c) If reasoning about the good life (or, for that matter, justice) means moving back and forth between our considered judgments about particular cases and the general principles we would articulate to make sense of these judgments, then the answer is "Yes."
d) If reasoning about the good life (or, for that matter, justice) means moving back and forth between our considered judgments about particular cases and the general principles we would articulate to make sense of these judgments, then the answer is "No."
e) b) and c)
Answer:
a) If reasoning about the good means that contending parties must share a single rule or maxim or criterion for the good life, to which one can appeal in every disagreement about morality, then the answer is "Yes."
Explanation:
According to Professor Michael J Sandel, he believed that if judgments about the good cannot be avoided in debates about justice and rights, then it is possible to reason about the good if the two differing parties have a similar rule or maxim for the good life which can appeal to every of their disagreement about morality, then yes, it is possible to reason about the good.
Answer: E
Explanation:
Damien Hirst's work is largely concerned with spirituality, and with the notion of death as both an end and a beginning. What motif does he return to repeatedly to symbolize this transformation?
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options included, we can say that motif he returns to repeatedly to symbolize this transformation is the butterfly.
Damien Hirst's work is largely concerned with spirituality, and with the notion of death as both an end and a beginning. When he uses the butterfly as the motif, what he wants to show is the transformation process from the caterpillar to the butterfly. The caterpillar has to pass through an extremely hard transformation process of change and renovation to become a better form of existence in the form of a butterfly that can fly and expand.