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Help With Miscellaneous Papers
Plato And Love
... yet to be one who understands its powers fully. As we see from Plato's Symposium, even the wisest of men, in a time when the search for knowledge was seen as the pathway to enlightenment, couldn’t adequately define love and its implications on the human spirit.
Though many of the guidelines and characteristics of love set forth by Plato provide important incite to the meaning of love, some have become antiquated and cannot apply to modern society. The Symposium outlines the different popular views about love during Plato’s time. Plato intentionally portrays some as ignorant and others as valid thoug ...
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Christmas, Retailers, And The Santa Claus Conspiracy
... the perfect gifts, having the
most eye-damaging house decorations on the block, or having a hairy old fat
man in red underwear arrested for putting their child on his lap and
whispering to them to tell him what they "really" want (strangely enough
there are some parents out there who actually pay money each year to have
this abuse inflicted upon their children).
The whole idea of Santa Claus is one of the scariest I've come
across and yet we embrace it. The entire story sounds like something you
should threaten your kid with if he doesn't want to eat his veggies. As I
understand it he's supposed to be a fat man ...
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A Scope Of Microsoft
... by Gates, had a vision of computers powered by software developed by the company being a way of life. The goal was to integrate computers into people’s everyday lives. The company started out in Gates’ garage with primitive technology and unlimited aspiration. Today the company has grown to be the world’s number one software developer and manufacturer. The company offers a very diverse line of products ranging from home user applications to high tech business software. Microsoft develops and manufactures a full line of games, web publishing, and most importantly, it’s number one piece of software, Wind ...
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Animal Abuse
... today.
Meat is needed for a good healthy diet. We should not
hunt animals for sport or make them do silly circus tricks
like, standing on their heads and climbing on top of other
animals. Angling might be the only exception to this
because without angling, the rivers would be over populated
with fish (who have a very small memory span anyway). It
could disrupt the food chain. Hunting wild animals and
reptiles is not necessary. The food chain would be just
fine if we stopped wild animal hunting, for example, fox
hunting, wild cat hunting, elephant hunting, crocodile
hunting and whale hunting. ...
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Multicultural Education: Piecing Together The Puzzle
... and recognition of our cultures and communities and how they
have shaped us” (p. 267). By adding a multicultural component to their
curriculums, teachers can help students see how each individual fits into the
big picture.
There are, however, arguments against multicultural education (Banks,
1995). For example, some critics believe that multicultural education is
directed toward only minority groups, thus discriminating against middle class,
white, heterosexual males. Others believe that multiculturalism is against
Western and democratic ideals. A final argument is the claim that
multiculturalism will ...
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Information On Black Libraries
... are not to be found in other institutions in Switzerland. Current
periodicals from southern Africa include newspapers, community newsletters,
business bulletins and scientific journals.
The collection of bibliographies is intended to cover all major geographic
regions and subject issues concerning sub-Saharan Africa. They enable us to
maintain the original purpose of the institution, i.e. to provide
bibliographical information to researchers and others interested in Africa.
The Archives
The archival collection consists of several sections. One section primarily
holds personal papers of individuals from Nami ...
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Hockey
... patterns and the sequences of their moves keep changing.
The sport of ice came from the games played on makeshift ice skates in Northern Europe during the Middle Ages, similar to field , it involves hitting an object with sticks between two goalposts. Probably the first ice players were North American Indians who used field tools that were curved at the lower end. The French word for the similarly shaped shepherd's crook, hoquet, was attached by French explorers who watched the Indians' ball-and-stick games.
Although the original game called for nine men on each side, the number of team players involved could ...
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The Study Of Deviance
... Even though they are similar in the sense that they all study deviant behavior, each theory differs immensely.
Edwin Sutherland started the learning theory, or differential association, in 1939. He simply stated that deviance is "passed on from one to another in a genuine learning process" (p.87). The two main elements in his theory are intensity and priority. This meant that the earlier one is exposed to deviance and the more personal he/she is with the person committing the deviant acts, the more likely he/she is to commit the acts themselves. Sutherland concluded that "a person becomes delinquent or c ...
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Trends In Policing
... with the community, and the extensive use of foot patrol. The downside to the political era was that the police got its authority from the politics and the law, the close tie with politics posed as a problem.
“In New York, for example, the first chief of police could not dismiss officers under his command. The tenure of the chief was limited to one year. Consequently, any early New York cop who was solidly supported by his alderman and assistant alderman could disobey a police superior with virtual impunity. So while the British were firing bobbies left and right for things like showing up late for ...
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Michelangelo
... it's natural state. Buonarroti was called to Rome in 1505 by Pope Julius II to create for him a monumental tomb. We have no clear sense of what the tomb was to look like, since over the years it went through at least five conceptual revisions. The tomb was to have three levels; the bottom level was to have sculpted figures representing Victory and bond slaves. The second level was to have statues of Moses and Saint Paul as well as symbolic figures of the active and contemplative life-representative of the human striving for, and reception of, knowledge. The third level, it is assumed, was to have an effigy of the d ...
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