5 SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS
NO OUTSIDE RESEARCH OR OPINIONS !! STRICTLY BASED ON TEXT I HAVE ATTACHED !!
Reading: Chapter 2, A General Theory of Love
For this reading quiz you will answer five, long answer questions on the above chapter. Your answers must be based on the content of the chapter, not your opinions or outside research. A suggested length for answers is 100-200 words. Any shorter risks not answering the question fully.
Your answers must be your own words. Cutting and pasting, copying expressions or even paraphrasing (i.e. rewriting a passage by changing the words) are all forms of plagiarism. If you do any of these, even for just a small part of the quiz, you will receive a 0 for the whole assignment, and may be subject to further institutional reprimands.
It is also strongly recommended that you avoid quoting from the text at length. Your answers should show your understanding put into your own words, not your ability to pick out relevant passages from the textbook. Quoting will not result in a 0, but full credit is unlikely for an answer with extensive quotes.
Each question is worth one point. Your answers will be graded along the following scale:
1/1 This is the grade for a perfect answer. To receive this grade the question must be fully answered, the answer must show a nuanced understanding of the materials, the answer must be written in grammatical English, and the writing must be elegant and well-structured.
***EACH SHORT ANSWER 100 WORDS
QUESTION 1: What morals do the authors extract from the evolutionary history of the brain? That is, how does the evolutionary history of the brain support the triune model of the brain?
QUESTION 2:Explain the structure and function of the reptilian brain.
QUESTION 3:Explain the structure and function of the limbic system.
QUESTION 4:Explain the structure and function of the neocortex.
QUESTION 5:What is the significance of the following passage: We say, “I will,” and “I will not,” and imagine ourselves (though we obey the orders of some prosaic person every day) our own masters, when the truth is that our masters are sleeping. One wakes within us, and we are ridden like beasts, though the rider is but some hitherto unguessed part of ourselves.”