<p>Where can I find the “audit” exam?</p>
<p>Alec: it’s the Treaty of Maastricht.</p>
<p>Let’s consolidate some FRQ topics. Add any that you think might be on the test tomorrow:
- Women’s rights
- Cold War, Soviet Union, and the Eastern Bloc</p>
<p>Can someone explain what scholasticism is and how it’s different from humanism?</p>
<p>@DarkWing, I have 99, 02, 08 MC exams and answers.</p>
<p>^Do you have the 2008 Audit Exam or the 2008 Released Exam?</p>
<p>Which of the following was a central part of national socialist ideaology?
anticommunism
conservatism
protestantism
utilitarianism
syndicalism</p>
<p>Why is the answer Anticommunism? I thought it was utilitarianism. what is anticommunism…</p>
<p>utilitarianism does not work because the greatest good for the greatest number of people is what to aim for, and the Nazis were really a minority. Furthermore, many of the things the Nazis did obviously would not be able to be considered "good’ at all. The Nazis and facists formed an anticommunist alliance (like when Italy and Germany supported Spanish facists against the USSR backed republicans during the spanish civil war), which is why it was such a big shock when nazi germany signed the non aggression pact with the soviets</p>
<p>anyone have tips on the approach to understanding political history? im reading out of PR, specifically about global wars, and im not retaining much.</p>
<p>Oh… I thought socialism branched off into communism? So socialism = nazis and fachists? </p>
<p>Not getting this…</p>
<p>Just got a 48/80 on a PR MC…yay…:(</p>
<p>“National socialists” refer to the Nazis, and “Anticommunism” means against communists. Hitler and his Nazis did not like the Communists mainly because the represented the exact opposite of his view (the far left).</p>
<p>scholasticism is the concept where the catholic church uses logic to try to prove the church’s legitimacy.
humanism is where people go back and study classics, rather than just listen to church’s explanation.</p>
<p>Got a 53/80 on practice test. Pretty content lol. Trying to hit 60 mark though!</p>
<p>How should I write the FRQs? How many examples are absolutely necessary per paragraph?</p>
<p>So hard to retain PR stuff…</p>
<p>anyone got a cram packet?</p>
<p>edit: found one here: <a href=“HugeDomains.com”>HugeDomains.com;
<p>Who was Friedrich Hegel?
@Swagger, I don’t really like that one. It’s 50 pages, the author doesn’t cover all the material, it was written in 2001, etc.etc.</p>
<p>^^ would like to know this as well (about the FRQs and examples in them)</p>
<p>And, @ RAlec114, the Nazis called themselves the “national socialists” because the government controlled some aspects of the economy (totalitarianism). They did not care, however, about redistributing resources equally; they were more concerned with efficiency. Mussolini’s Italy and (to a lesser extent) nazi germany were both fascist states because they devoted their entire regime towards strengthening the military. A communist government (USSR) would have everything state owned, and then try to equally distribute the wealth generated, although would not be centered around the military.</p>
<p>@zhangm94</p>
<p>Hegel wrote about dialectics and how history is created.
The dialectics illustrate somehow how the communist manifesto came to be.</p>
<p>well… I’m turning in for the night. Good luck to everyone tomorrow, and I’m sure that we’ll all do great! My inner Romanticist just gives me this feeling that we’re going to, while my enlightenment philosophe is telling me that it makes rational sense, considering how much we all studied. Now the Christian Humanist in me will say a prayer for all of our benefit, then go and read some classics. Until tomorrow!</p>
<p>But the communist in you is saying, “Work harder!”</p>