History, asked by christinemaeramos21, 6 months ago

how would the life of the philippine nation been different if rizal had never been born​

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Answered by mrunalbabar655
7

Answer:

while studying medicine and humanities in Manila, Madrid and Berlin (1881-1887). The medical manuscript is not among his canonical works, but it reveals the precocious talent of a brilliant mind. It also displays key leitmotifs of his life and corpus.

Rizal wrote extensively from his early youth onward. He published articles and poems, and edited an account from 1609 of historical events in the Philippines. Today, he is remembered mostly for Noli me tangere [“Touch Me Not”] and El filibusterismo [“The Subversive”], two novels that denounced the abuses of Spanish colonialism and the Catholic Church in the Philippines. Although Rizal always refused violence, his works influenced an uprising that led to the Philippine Revolution against Spain in 1896. These events triggered his trial and execution by the Spanish authorities, as well as his posthumous mythologization.

Approximately half of the 250 pages in Rizal’s notebook contain medical notes. From the beginning of the academic year (Madrid, October 4, 1883), Rizal’s entries record clinical histories, symptoms, diagnoses, treatments and surgical operations. His anatomical sketches have artistic merit. One can tell that he alternated medical classes with drawing lessons (see his 1884 diary). Rizal attended lectures at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San Fernando, a prestigious institution where Goya had taught in the 18th century. Perhaps Rizal’s interest in artistic illusionism reaffirmed his career choice: he became an ophthalmologist motivated

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Answered by MeeraYush
8

Answer:

The life of Philippine nation been different if Rizal had never born as cultural institutions and life of people would be cultural

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