Charles Darwin. he had came up with the theory.
The General Idea of the Revolution in the Nineteenth Century was created in 1851.
They would oppose the idea
im guessing this is for Rayburn's online test XD
Although ancient philosophers had some idea of the balanced condition in the body, it was Claude Bernard (1813-1878) a Frenchman of the nineteenth century, who developed a clear idea of balance.
Thomas Jefferson and Horace Mann
the salon
Matthew Arnold is widely considered one of the most influential literary critics in the late nineteenth century. His essays on culture and criticism, as well as his promotion of the idea of "high culture" and the pursuit of literary excellence, had a significant impact on the literary landscape of his time.
Richard Wagner was the nineteenth century composer whose use of leitmotifs in his operas influenced the idea of unity in film music. Filmmakers such as Max Steiner and Erich Korngold adapted this method, incorporating recurring musical themes to represent characters, emotions, or ideas throughout a film.
There are three ways to put it in a sentence, I suppose. 1) I have no idea what "antidisestablishmentarianism" means. 2) Antidisestablishmentarianism is a political position that originated in nineteenth-century Britain, where antidisestablishmentarians were opposed to proposals to remove the Church of England's status as the state church of England forwarded principally by both Payne and Tuffin. 3) The Church of England was stuck in a state of antidisestablishmentarianism in the nineteenth century.
In the early nineteenth century, the idea of "Manifest Destiny" led citizens of the United States to settle on the western frontier. The discovery of gold in California in 1849 hastened that process.
Theistic evolution is the idea that God intervenes to guide the course of evolution. Naturalistic evolution makes no mention of God. Naturalistic evolution is the idea that evolution is a normal result of natural processeses. Naturalistic evolution is compatible with both atheism, and compatible with the idea of a God that can set in motion self-sufficient processes that work without any need for ongoing intervention.
The new religious idea that set the stage for the reform movements of the mid-nineteenth century was the Second Great Awakening. This revivalist movement emphasized individual piety, personal salvation, and the belief in social reform as a manifestation of one's faith. It inspired a sense of moral responsibility among believers, leading many to engage in various social issues such as abolition, women's rights, and temperance, fostering a spirit of activism and reform across the United States.