Science, asked by sushree48, 9 months ago

state the nature of non -metals​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Explanation:

by alkenes is a consequence of the complex nature of the excited states of 7r electron systems and conjugated systems in particular

Answered by rithanyaar
1

Answer:

hope it helps you dude

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Explanation:

It is easy to spot a contradiction between theory and practice in any government’s foreign policy, whether of a hegemonic government such as the United States, or the government of a rising power such as China. In the following, I will explore and compare the foundations in political thought of one particular contradiction in respectively US intervention policy and Chinese non-intervention policy. Examining differences in political thought helps explain why the Chinese understanding of intervention, informed by Confucian, Buddhist and Taoist traditions, usually appears apologist from a perspective informed by Western traditions in thought. I will argue that American interventionism, reliant on the Western tradition, is Lockean in the selection of targets and Hobbesian when it is enforced. In comparison, Chinese non-interventionism aligns more with the idea of Tao, or Way, which can justify both external non-action and internal self-strengthening.

A contradiction between theory and practice is manifest across intervention policy. This article attends specifically to the internal contradiction between the principles according to which Washington and Beijing evaluate whether a state should be subjected to intervention, the very different set of principles that guide their own actions towards such states and the principles that guide how they rule themselves. A realist understanding of this kind of contradiction would accept this hypocrisy as easily explained by national interest calculus. However, a more complex approach seems justified as foreign policy leaders are typically believed to act with good reason and at the very least need to argue for public support. In cases where the theory-practice contradiction bothers neither policy makers nor their constituencies, something deeper than functional hypocrisy must be the cause of this apparent desensitization.

A loss of sensitivity is apparent when individual military interventions mandated by Washington do not comply with human rights norms that the US purport to use to identify failed states requiring of intervention. In fact, US interventions have resulted in massive civilian casualties and jeopardized the treasures of civilization. And yet this irony does not incur serious self-criticism. Similarly, China’s insistence on non-intervention in failed states, in order that spontaneity may take over the course of events, contrasts with Beijing’s constant appeals for self-strengthening in domestic governance. The Chinese government and people’s disregard of failing governance in other countries contrasts with the portrayal of good governance as a triumph of the Chinese Communist Party.

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