In composition, unity is the quality of oneness in a paragraph or essay that results when all the words and sentences contribute to a single effect or main idea. Also called wholeness.
For the past two centuries, composition handbooks have insisted that unity is an essential characteristic of an effective text. Professor Andy Crockett points out that the "five-paragraph theme and current-traditional rhetoric's emphasis on method reflect further the expediency and utility of unity." However, Crockett also notes that "for rhetoricians, the achievement of unity has never been taken for granted" (Encyclopedia of Rhetoric and Composition, 1996).
If you are asking what I think, this is third person view.
I would be God so I wouldn’t have to deal with the pain and screwed up parts of our world
Answer: I think it’s asking you about what you feel is important to you, so I think all of the answers are correct
Explanation: sorry if im wrong