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Court Cases Case Study
I am the advocate acting on behalf of Angie McSonorous and I would first submit that Angie met the
requirements of Section 2 of the University Lecturers (Scotland) Act 1985. I will firstly establish
that Angie was "required to resign" and that she was within ten years of the official retirement age.
Angie was warned about her behaviour a number of times and she sought medical help, she was
then diagnosed as having a mild personality defect known as "perfectio demens" and she was
required to resign. The fact that Angie sought medical help and that the defect was mild and
probably easily manageable shows that she would not voluntarily resign from her role when she was
taking steps to control her condition. Rather, it shows that she wanted to ... Show more content on
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I would submit that it is not binding because Angie's case is likely being heard in the outer house
and their decisions are not horizontally binding meaning they do not need to be followed. Despite
the Stewart case being a highly persuasive case, it is not binding in terms of interpretation as it
involves different statutory provisions. I would also argue that the broader interpretation of
"inability" in the case of Stewart should not be binding on Angie's case because the ordinary
meaning of the word would produce an anomaly in Angie's case. The anomaly being that a person
dismissed for misconduct that was avoidable would receive a pension, whereas a person dismissed
for a personality defect like Angie which was not their fault would not be eligible for a pension. This
anomaly is a reason why the ordinary meaning of "inability" should not be used and instead the
narrow meaning of only physical or mental infirmity should be used. For all the foregoing reasons,
the narrow interpretation of "inability" is appropriate for the 1985 act and Angie's reason for
resignation is not included in
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King Henry's Inability To Sleep
As he describes in his soliloquy, King Henry is vexed by his inability to sleep, and this state bestows
upon him feelings of confusion and frustration. The King's use of imagery in describing the living
conditions of lesser individuals who are able to sleep and his own help to convey his attitude
towards his insomnia. Before the start of the periodic sentence on line 15, the King Henry presents
the reader with images of the vile conditions in which the peasants live and the entity of sleep
chooses to reside, pointing out the repulsive beds, poor living spaces, and the melody of the
"buzzing night–flies" that sounds throughout the area. Within this description, he inserts images of
his own luxurious living quarters, where the "sweetest melody" is the lullaby of ... Show more
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Almost immediately, he apostrophizes sleep, personifying it, and proceeds to ask a number of
questions to the newly–conceived entity; his inquiries, which are rhetorical in nature, question
sleep's reasoning behind his insomnia. These show up numerously and in quick succession,
indicating that he does not understand his sleeplessness, and is pleading for answers out of
desperation; however, he maintains a formal, non–accusatory tone when inquiring. This reserve,
however, gradually deteriorates, and the strength of his hysteria takes control of his language at line
15, manifesting itself in the form of a breathless periodic sentence. The tension increases throughout
the sentence, and breakless structure indicates that the King's attitude is approaching emotional
hysteria. He ends his monologue with a synecdoche, noting that "uneasy lies the head that wears a
crown;" he himself is completely vexed by his current state. Ultimately, the syntax suggests that the
attitude of the King is that of desperation; he pleads for answers, and his frustration mounts as any
type of concrete explanation goes
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Society's Inability To Change In Hamlet
Society's Inability to Change At some point in everyone's life they seem to go through a rough
patch, which almost always results in irrational behavior. This is exactly what we see in the famous
Shakespearian play Hamlet. In the play, Hamlet goes through a countless number of tragic events
that cause him to experience a plethora of emotions. Some of these crazy dramatic situations include
the death of his father, his mother marrying his uncle, his uncle becoming king, and, most important
of all, the death of his true love Ophelia. It was Hamlet's inability to control his emotions that
caused all of this pain in his life. Whether it was through Hamlet's inability to get help for what he
was feeling, bringing others feelings down with him, or believing that violence was the answer to
his problems, these are situations that are still very relevant in the world in which we live.
Throughout the entire story, Hamlet was never able to completely share his ... Show more content on
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It seems that the common thread of violence is linked to wanting revenge for another's death. We see
this theme of violence in Hamlet, Laertes, and also Fortinbras, on their path of seeking ultimate
revenge. While both Fortinbras and Larities didn't think twice about getting revenge, Hamlet wanted
to know all of the facts before he was willing to kill Claudius (Act III Scene II). The need for loved
ones to seek revenge for murder is still something we see today, but the type of revenge has
changed. In Hamlet the only means of revenge seemed to be killing the person just as they had
killed your loved one. In this modern day you may see the occasional revenge similar to those in
Hamlet, but murder is much less acceptable today than it was in their time period. A similar type of
revenge that you might see today is lobbying for the perpetrator to get convicted for murder or have
them receive the death
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Ability 's Inability ( Rough Draft )
Ability's Inability (Rough Draft)
When considering Christian allegories that have been written through the years, one has stood out
from the rest. This piece of literature has stood the test of time and remained beloved by many
readers. In "Class Formation, Politics, Structures of Feeling" Geoff Eley states "Pilgrim 's Progress
is, with Rights of Man, one of the two foundational texts of the English working–class movement:
Bunyan and Paine, with Cobbett and Owen, contributed most to the stock of ideas and attitudes
which make up the raw material of the movement from 1790–1850" (Eley 217). The Pilgrim's
Progress was written by John Bunyan in February of 1678. At the time, Bunyan titled it "The
Pilgrim 's Progress from This World to That Which Is to Come; Delivered under the Similitude of a
Dream". In modern publications of the work, Bunyan's sequel to the work titled simply "Pilgrim's
Progress, Part II" has been added at the end of the original tale. Although the two tales were not
originally published back to back, reading them one after the other shows the striking differences
between them. Bunyan specifically used different events, people, and circumstance in the two
different parts to symbolically show how Christian life can vary greatly depending upon the
individual.
John Bunyan's readers wanted the story in The Pilgrim's Progress to continue beyond the original
tale. Two years after publishing the original story, Bunyan wrote his first sequel to The Pilgrim's
Progress
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Sensory Model Of Agnosia Essay
The main sensory models of agnosia are: visual, tuctile and auditory
1.Visuval agnosia: is the inability to identify & recognize familiar people & objects even when they
have intact perception of that object.Lesions in the left occipital and temporal lobe leads to this kind
of agnosia there are two types of visual agnosia:
Appreceptive visual agnosia: display the ability to see contours and outline when Shown an object
but they experience difficulty if asked to categorise objects.It is also known as visual space agnosia,
which is a condition in which a person fails to recognize objects due to functional impairment of the
occipito–temporal visual areas of the brain, while other visual functions are intact such as: colour
vision, brightness ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Auditory agnosia: difficulty to distinguish between environmental sound and verbal and nonverbal
sounds
Auditory verbal agnosia: difficulty to recognise words which are spoken as simultaneously
meaningful
Phonagnosia: inability to recognise a familer voices even if they are able to hear and understand the
words used
Other than the three major forms of agnosia, there are many other types as listed below:
Finger agnosia
Loss of knowledge or the inability to find meaning or differences associated with different fingers
on the hand ie, difficulties with naming the fingers correctly, as well as pairing the fingers with their
meaning
Topographical agnosia: is is the loss or difficulty in learning of previously familiar routes, layout,
maps, places etc due to damage in right parietal lobe.It includes difficulty with orienting themselves
in
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Stereotypes In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men
"When people rely on surface appearances and false racial stereotypes, rather than in–depth
knowledge of others at the level of the heart, mind, and spirit, their ability to access and understand
people accurately is compromised"– James A. Forbes. In the novel, "Of Mice and Men" written by
John Steinbeck, George and Lennie are a dynamic duo. George relies on Lennie's lack of knowledge
and mental capacity for friendship and Lennie relies on George's quick wits and knowledge for
guidance. In other terms, George is stereotyped as a genius and Lennie is stereotyped as a mindless,
brute. As the story proceeds, George and Lennie meet a swamper by the name of Candy that is
stereotyped as useless due to his missing hand. People are commonly stereotyped based upon first
glances and mental capabilities such as Lennie's lack of knowledge and inability to retain
information and Candy's uselessness ,for he his missing a hand. ... Show more content on
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Lennie constantly forgets information and feels bad. "'Lennie looked startled and then in
embarrassment hid his face behind his knees.'I forgot again."'(Steinbeck 6). Lennie often feels
embarrassed because of his disabilities. His disability prevents Lennie from retaining the
information that he receives. Due to this condition Lennie is not perceived as others by smart, but as
stupid. Lennie's inability to remember bits of information makes him feel embarrassed and
stereotyped as
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The Inability To Compromise Analysis
The Inability to Compromise "But this momentous question, like a fire bell in the night, awakened
and filled me with terror..." As eloquently outlined by Thomas Jefferson, the author of the
Declaration of Independence and the 3rd President of the United States, accurately forecasted the
rising danger and hostility surrounding the question of the expansion of slavery. Throughout the
19th Century, the United States underwent drastic technological and cultural transformations
resulting in the rise of previously unobserved controversies concerning slavery. However, opposing
opinions rapidly rose in response to these issues. As observed through the disagreements
surrounding the economic, social, and political differences between the North and ... Show more
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Emerging over the balance of free and slave states, regional ideology directly impacted the
discussion of allowing California into the Union as a free state on Congress's floor in the late 1840's.
Ultimately, this controversy became resolved in the Compromise of 1850, which allowed California
into the Union while strengthening the Federal Fugitive Slave Law appeasing Southerners.
Agreement rapidly dissipated when the territory of Kansas applying for statehood conducted
multiple fraudulent votes concerning the issue of allowing slavery within its borders. Realizing the
necessity of outside help, the federal government imposed itself I the issue and recognized Kansas
as a free state. Southerners were outraged. Throughout the South, the belief that the federal
government consistently overstepped its constitutional authority firmly implanted itself following
the acceptance of Kansas as a free state. Adding fuel to the flames, in 1857, the Supreme Court case
of Dred Scott v. Sandford bestowed "legal reasoning" to Southerners looking for justification against
the federal government. Reaching an unavoidable turning point, the Presidential election of 1860
promised historic consequences. Political leaders spread over the South promised that if the
Republican candidate for President, Abraham Lincoln, won
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When Does Hamlet To Kill His Father's Suicide
Hamlet written by William Shakespeare illustrates the thoughts and feelings of the main character
Hamlet as he tries to avenge the death of his father, King Hamlet. The death of Hamlet's father first
starts as an accidental death, but the ghost of King Hamlet who is still in purgation tells Hamlet that
it was not accidental. The ghost/King Hamlet tells his son, Hamlet, that he was actually murdered by
his brother Claudius by the use of poison. After finding out the truth about his father's death, Hamlet
is given three injunctions by the ghost/his father in order to avenge his death, these include: remove
the incest from the crown, leave your mother to god and her own guilt, and do not taint your mind.
As the play progresses, Hamlet does his ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
One of Hamlet's three injunctions is to remove insest from the crown. In other words, he is supposed
to kill King Claudius. Hence, Hamlet should kill King Claudius when given the chance; but he is
unable to do so since his tragic flaw prevents him. When Hamlet walks in on King Claudius
praying, he has already been persuaded enough to know that Claudius did murder his father. But,
since King Claudius is praying, Hamlet's tragic flaw of his inability to act is evident. This is because
he believes that if he kills King Claudius while he is praying, he will just send him to heaven
because he had already purged his sins. This can be seen through the quotation stated by Hamlet,
"Now I might do it {pat,} now he is a–praying" (3.3.77). Shortly after stating this quotation, Hamlet
elaborates on if he should Kill Claudius now by stating, "A villain kills my father, and for that, / I,
his sole son, do this same villain send / To heaven (3.3.81–83). Therefore, Hamlet is given the
chance to kill King Claudius, but is not able to act on it because King Claudius is praying at that
time. Hamlet then believes that if he kills King Claudius now, King Claudius would just go to
heaven and that would be Hamlet's revenge. His revenge for his father's death would only be a favor
to King Claudius because Claudius has already asked for forgiveness for his sins. Thus, killing him
now would only send him to heaven. Hamlet's tragic flaw of his inability to act is evident in this
scene because he is not able to kill King Claudius just because he is praying. Hamlet came up with
an excuse to make up for his inability to act, but in reality he was just trying to hide that he couldn't
act on revenge to King Claudius yet. Overall, Hamlet's tragic flaw of not being able to act is evident
when he is not able to obtain revenge on King Claudius because he is
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Effects Of Inability To Focus
The article talks about how this inability to focus hurts other aspects, such as the ability to cook
something without burning it. People get distracted and forget that they have stuff in the oven. This
actually happened to me once. I had started boiling some water to make some soup, and then I got
distracted with some technology and forgot the pot was on the stove. All of the water had evaporated
and it started to create smoke which I didn't even notice until just before the fire alarm went off.
Technology really does affect our inability to focus. It also talks about how technology may have
caused the children to receive poor grades. The son mentioned in the article had a ton of programs
and applications available to him on his computer,
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Describe The Circumstances That Contributed To My...
The circumstances that contributed to my inability to meet the required gpa was the fact that the
second semester was my first real semester as a student. Throughout the semester I was dealing with
the after math of my car accident. I was called by law enforcement staff to testify against the man
that hit me. We went to court and the state declared him giulty and was sent to jail because he had no
assets to pay my medical bills. The case was solved but my medical bills were not payed by the man
that hit me. My family and I cannot offord to pay my medical bills, which added stress to my plate. I
carry a big responsibility at home. Due to my mothers illness she is not able to take care of the
household, so that responibility is left for me to
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The Man Of The Crowd And Ligeia By Edgar Allen Poe
In Edgar Allen Poe's, "The Man of the Crowd" and "Ligeia", and Nathaniel Hawthorne's, "Young
Goodman Brown," there is a constant presence of darkness throughout each text. The darkness
displayed in these works allude to the ongoing theme of the ambiguity of sin. Both authors, Poe and
Hawthorne, are considered to be Dark Romantics because they both center their works around the
conflict between good and evil in every individual and showcase the dark side of human nature. In
using elements from Dark Romanticism, Poe and Hawthorne create characters who struggle in their
ability to find one's own true self, resulting in character's inability to accept and understand others
because they are incapable of accepting sin, thus preventing the characters from then accepting
themselves. In each of the stories, there lies an overwhelming distrust and lack of acceptance of
others. Poe and Hawthorne begin each of their short stories by demonstrating each Narrator and
Goodman Brown 's inability to accept others. In Poe 's "The Man in the Crowd", this is seen by the
Narrator 's decision to follow the man which he cannot identify. The Narrator makes the decision to
follow the man as it would allow him "a good opportunity of examining his person", something he
needs desperately, demonstrated in his infatuation with the man ("Man in the Crowd" 4). The
Narrator 's need for identification demonstrates his inability to accept others. In Poe 's story
"Ligeia", the inability of acceptance of
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How Did Willy And Amanda's Inability To Become A Family...
Willy and Amanda's Inability to Live in Harmony with their Families
In the play's "Death of a Salesman" and "The Glass Menagerie", Willy Loman and Amanda
Wingfield have the opportunity to become a "family person". However, due to their character flaws,
they are unable to create a loving, family atmosphere. A "family person" is someone who their
children respect, look up to, and create a pleasant environment for them to grow up and pursue their
aspirations. Willy Loman and Amanda Wingfield's imposing nature, inability to live in the present,
obsession with wealth, and failure to accept responsibility keep them from realizing their potential
to become a "family person".
Willy and Amanda are way too imposing on their children, and thus cause ... Show more content on
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Willy's obsession with success is evident from the very beginning. Willy is trying to live his dream
thru his sons, who want nothing to do with his plans. Biff summarizes Willy as his family is
discussing what made him act so abnormally towards his family. "He had a good dream. It's the only
dream you can have–to come out number–one man."(1553) It was a good dream, but it came at the
expense of his family. Biff eventually gets very frustrated at Willy's whole outlook at life and tells
him" I am not a leader of men, Willy, and neither are you"(1550). Biff realizes that chasing the
American dream has destroyed Willy; the only thing he can think about is money. The first priority
has to be his family, and everything else can follow. Unfortunately, Willy had to bring his family
into his quest for affluence. Burt Cardullo summarizes Willy's character flaw beautifully in The
Columbia Journal of American Studies. "In fact, he kills himself for money. Because he confuses
materialistic success with a worthiness for love, he commits suicide to give his son Biff the
insurance benefit as a stake for more business." Amanda is also obsessed with becoming prosperous
and just like Willy; she relies on her children to achieve success for her. For example, Amanda signs
Laura up to go to Business College, so she can be successful. When Amanda finds out that Laura
has been going for strolls in the park and has dropped out of school, she goes hysterical saying they
will be "eating the crust of humility all their life!"(1164). Amanda doesn't care that Laura does not
want to go into business; all she cares about is that now she will be poor for the rest of her life.
Amanda never asked Laura what she wanted to do, just sent her to business school so she could
become rich and provide generously for her
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Visual Agnosia
Agnosia is a loss of ability to recognize objects, persons, sounds, shapes, or smells. The specific
sense is not defective nor is there any significant memory loss. It is usually associated with a brain
injury or neurological illness. There are 3 forms of Agnosia: Visual Agnosia. A person cannot
recognize people or objects even though there is no abnormality of the eyes or the visual system.
Auditory Agnosia. A person cannot hear things such as words, environmental sounds or music, but
can hear other sounds. Somatosensory Agnosia. A person cannot tell what an object is by touching
it. People with agnosia do not suffer from general memory loss. Patients may have visual agnosia
with or without the other forms of agnosia. There
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The Inability to Define Cultural Heritage Tourism
Among the peculiar cultural trends to crop up during the last few decades, cultural or heritage
tourism is perhaps the most socially significant and the most difficult to define. Several factors
influence the fluctuating meaning of the catchall term heritage tourism, including "the rather
haphazard classification of things and elements as 'heritage' because people are not quite sure
exactly what this title covers" (Poria, Butler, & Airey, 2003), and the increased sensitivity expressed
by government agencies to the concerns of cultural entities. Although an official designation of the
term heritage tourism has been provided by the federal government, in the form of Section 7 of
Executive Order 13287: Preserve America, which "defines heritage tourism as: the business and
practice of attracting and accommodating visitors to a place or area based especially on the unique
or special aspects of that locale's history, landscape (including trail systems), and culture" (Advisory
Council on Historic Preservation, 2006), there is no established consensus between the various
industries involved. This inability to define heritage tourism with any modicum of certitude has
spawned an academic environment in which travel writer Pat Yale, in his book From Tourist
Attractions to Heritage Tourism, classifies heritage tourism as "tourism centered on what we have
inherited, which can mean anything from historic buildings, to art works, to beautiful scenery"
(1997), while The National Trust
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Indirect And Indirect Discrimination
Discrimination barrier
People with inabilities are frequently regarded as less human than the individuals who don't have a
handicap, for example, individuals at school or universities annoying and harassing impaired
individuals since they can't do things like taking an interest in the games on the off chance that they
are the wheel seat clients, or they might be tormented on the grounds that they carry on and
comprehend things uniquely in contrast to every other person. They can likewise be oppressed by
individuals overpowering them excessively. For instance when somebody demands helping them
with everything on the grounds that by helping them with all that they are as yet being dealt with as
though they are something not as much as human. Still they are being dealt with as clearly unique
and in doing as such it can likewise make them insulted and lose trust in the things they can do
themselves.
Disability discrimination can either be direct or indirect.
Direct discrimination is the place you are dealt with less positively in view of your inability than
somebody without a disability would be dealt with in similar conditions.
Here is a case of direct discrimination as a result of having a disability:
A bar permits a family with a child who has cerebral paralysis to drink in their beer garden however
not in their family room. The family with the impaired child are not given the same decisions that
different families have.
Indirect discrimination is the place there is an
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Why Heart Failure ( Hf ) Is The Inability Of The Heart
Heart failure (HF) is the inability of the heart to pump adequately to meet the metabolic needs of the
body (Jeffrey et al, 2007). It is caused by structural or functional abnormalities of the heart (NICE,
2003). The reduced contractility leads to a reduced stroke volume, and therefore the heart rate is
increased to help maintain cardiac output. HF can either be chronic where it has been occurring over
time or acute, where it happens suddenly. Around 900,000 people in the UK have HF, with almost as
many as damaged hearts but with no symptoms (Petersen et al, 2002). The prevalence of HF
increases steeply with age, with the average age at first diagnosis is at 76. The risk of HF is greater
in males than in females in all age groups, but there are more females than males due to population
demographics (Eggett, 2014). The cost of general practitioner consultations has been estimated at
£45 million per year, with an additional £35 million for GP referrals to outpatient clinics. In addition
to this, community–based drug therapy costs the NHS around £129 million per year. The hospital
admissions due to HF are understood to increase by more than half in the next 25 years, largely due
to the ageing population. This paper will focus on comparing and contrasting the classic verves
contemporary understanding of HF, evaluating both the traditional concepts and more recent
developments of the understanding of this condition. Traditional concepts of HF The understanding
of HF has
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The Inability of Brutus to Assume Political Leadership of...
The Inability of Brutus to Assume Political Leadership of the Conspiracy Against Julius Caesar in
Shakespeare's Play In Julius Caesar, Shakespeare presents a broad range of historical personalities
as complicated human beings in agonizing conflict with one another and with themselves. Literary
authors A.L. Rowse once wrote, "No issue hinders a man's leadership capabilities more than his
confusing perception of honor, noble idealism, and inner self–conflict" (15). In his drama about
power, nobility, assassination, and revenge, Shakespeare examines this particular issue best in his
simple yet complex characterization of Brutus. Guided by conflicting emotions, Brutus, an idealistic
man, is unable to assume ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Vexed I am Of late with passions of some difference, Conceptions only proper to myself, Which
gives some soil, perhaps, to my behaviors. But let not therefore my good friends be grieved (Among
which number, Cassius, be you one), Nor construe any further my neglect Than that poor Brutus,
with himself at war, Forgets the shows of love to other men. (1.2. 37–46). In Scene I, Cassius utters
the first in a series of persuasive remarks designed to win Brutus on the part of King 2 the
conspiracy to destroy Caesar. But Brutus is incapable of assuming the leadership role as his self–
conflict reflects both his personal love of Caesar and his duty to the Republic. He
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Introduction. Anterograde Amnesia Is The Inability To Form
Introduction
Anterograde amnesia is the inability to form new memories, while keeping old memories intact.
People who suffer from this impairment, are unable to encode new memories into long–term
memory but are able to keep them in short term. The movie Fifty First Dates portrays this type of
amnesia accurately and inaccurately. The main protagonists of Fifty First Dates are Lucy, played by
Drew Barrymore, and Henry, played by Adam Sandler. Lucy suffers from anterograde amnesia due
to brain damage. For the most part, the movie is accurate to the impairment and is almost exactly the
same as the impairment patients suffer from.
Plot of Fifty First Dates
In the movie Fifty First Dates Lucy has permanent brain damage due to a car accident. ... Show
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Procedural memory is usually memories associated with muscle memory where her body
remembers it even if she does not. This is also true to the type of amnesia. She even dreams about
Adam Sandler's character even though she is not sure how she knows him. Somehow, her
encounters with him are encoded even though she doesn't remember them explicitly.
A Real Life Example: FL and Similarities from the Movie
What is most interesting is that the movie seems to be based off of a real incident. Smith et. al
(2010) wrote about a special case of a patient named FL. She was in a car accident in 2005 and
reported difficulty retaining information from one day to the next. She describes her memory as
unaffected over the course of the day but when she falls asleep, the memory for each day disappears.
FL also, is able to recall things from before her accident. Lucy, a fictional character created for a
movie, shares many things in common with FL, thus showing that the film is accurate to the
disorder. It also is interesting to know that FL like Lucy was somehow able to remember
something's. According to Smith et. al (2010), "For some tests, unbeknownst to FL, material learned
on the previous day was intermixed with material learned on the same day as the test." In other
words, FL sometimes mixed in previously learned material that she did not recall learning due to her
impairment with material that she learned that day. This idea of intermixing material was also
accurate
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Does Hamlet Failing To Take Action Essay
Karli Coetzee 12.2 Hamlet Essay
Hamlet's inability to take action due to his thoughts and need to rationalise everything
Throughout the play Hamlet, Hamlet proves to be a victim in his need to rationalise everything.
Hamlet is plagued with questions and uncertainty and this indecisiveness leads to his inability to
take action.
Hamlet's need to analyse and prove everything certain draws his time of action farther away. Hamlet
doubts himself and whether or not the action that he wants to take is justifiable. Hamlet is provided
by the ghost with the information that King Hamlet was murdered by Claudius, but rather than
taking action immediately Hamlet questions whether the spirit "may be the devil" and decides that
he will have grounds more relative than this" and first determine if Claudius did murder his father.
This extends the time Hamlet waits before he takes action, proving that Hamlets thoughts and need
for justification hinders him from taking action. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Hamlet deals with the concept of revenge as an act that goes against his Christian morality. This
presents him with a moral dilemma as Hamlet is unsure whether he should obey his father and do
what is ethically correct in society, or what is morally correct under the Christian religion. After
meeting with the ghost Hamlet shows his uncertainty of what to do when he exclaims: "O all you
host of heaven! O earth! what else?" Hamlets inaction due to religious beliefs is also shown when
Hamlet has the opportunity to kill Claudius but refuses as he believes Claudius is praying and
therefore "this same villain" will be sent "to
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Warlord Rule and Sun Yat Sen's Inability to Achieve the...
Warlord Rule and Sun Yat Sen's Inability to Achieve the Aims of the Three People's Principles
I agree with the statement only to a small extent. The period of warlord rule was particularly chaotic
in China. However, even when order was being restored again, the aims of the three people's
principles were not all being achieved. Therefore, I feel that warlord rule is not the most important
reason as to why Sun Yat Sen was unable to achieve the aims of the three people's principles.
The three people's principles are the principle of nationalism, the principle of democracy and the
principle of the people's well–being. The first one is Sun Yat Sen's aim to unite the whole of China.
As for the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
During this period, it was also a time of lawlessness. The warlords fought each other as they hoped
to gain control over a larger territory. This brought about much suffering to the Chinese people. Sun
Yat Sen's principle of democracy is not being upheld as these warlord ruled over their area like a
dictator. These warlords exploited the people under them, like the peasants. Thus it is clear that Sun
Yat Sen's principle's are not being achieved or even upheld. He, himself could not do anything as his
party and government was still too weak. However, this period of warlord rule is not the only factor
that prevented him from being unable to achieve his aims.
Due to the disunity in his party, Kuomintang (KMT), he could not achieve the aims of his three
principles. Before he can actually unite the whole country, he would need to unite his party
members. He often met failure when he tried to reunite the country due to internal squabbles in his
own party. They often argued over the third principle. Some party members wanted the land of the
landlords to be taken away from them, and come under state ownership. However, there were others
who disagreed. Therefore, this made it very difficult for Sun Yat Sen to get his party members to
work together to achieve his aims. He soon realised he had to reorganize his movement again before
he could actually topple warlord rule and unify
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Psychobiological Perspective
From the neurobiological perspective, outside factors mentioned may have affected the way her
brain functions, factors such as the death of her father and the departure of her only child. These
events may have lead to her developing a sense of loneliness and depression, and which may have
led to other disorders that caused her to not function the same as she has before. The "variety" of life
changes may have caused a change in routine or other, making her feel disorganized in her life,
which may have translated into the way that she teaches.
From the humanistic perspective, which focuses on self improvement and free will, her inability to
teach effectively may have been declining due to her realising that her teaching style and lessons has
been "deteriorating" as well as her ability to motivate students. She may feel as if she isn't growing
as a person any longer, which may also lead to her doubting herself and her lessons, which may
have snowballed into her feeling unuseful and her doubt may have grown overtime, leading to
poorly planned lessons and less motivation to teach.
From the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Having not much interactions with the outside world, aside from his mother and Eddie, he is prone
to developing introversion, or social anxiety disorders. We can assume that his mother is not forcing
him to be confined within the home, he stays at home, even on weekends, on his own free will,
which shows that he may have a chance of being socially awkward. Going on a date, when the only
female interaction he's had has been with his mother, may prove to be difficult, since he isn't used to
interactions with others, especially strangers. His absences from an important project date at work
may also be because of his social anxiety and inability to effectively communicate with his
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The Reasons Behind Police's Inability To Catch Jack The...
The Reasons Behind Police's Inability To Catch Jack The Ripper
Jack The Ripper was never caught, and his identity remains a mystery to this day. The police were
unable to catch Jack The Ripper and solve the mystery of the Whit Chapel murders because of
several reasons.
The first reason is the police themselves. In London, there were two police forces. The Metropolitan
police and the City Of London police. The murders took place in both of the jurisdictions. The
police forces each had separate investigations going on and they did not share evidence or
information with each other. This hampered their investigations because a vital clue being held by
one police force may have linked in with evidence ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Vital clues that could have led to the capture of Jack The Ripper were overlooked.
The CID, who were set up to investigate crimes like this, had only just been set up. They had very
little experience of dealing with a serial killer, as this was the first one in the whole country. Because
of this they did not know how to deal with the murders and how to catch Jack The Ripper and made
mistakes that led to his escape.
The police tried using undercover officers as bait. However, because there were no women on the
force, men dressed up like women but this failed completely as the disguises were very poor.
The police interviewed many witnesses over and over again. Many of these were hoaxes and the
police wasted valuable time in doing this.
The police also tried training bloodhounds in following the scent of Jack The Ripper, however this
idea was soon abandoned as the dogs would not have been able to follow just one scent in an area
that was full of different smells.
The police also printed all the letters that were sent to them. This would have led to a widespread
panic and would have made it harder to keep the murders undercover. They also took no heed to the
warnings sent in the letters about the next victim, which led the killer being able to kill easily again.
The note written on the wall was
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Belonging Place
Finding a sense of belonging to a place can influence an individual's sense of acceptance within the
community and culture or opposingly can enhance their sense of isolation and alienation from
society.This is reflected through Raimond Gaita's memoir Romulus My Father and Manfred
Jurgensen's poem Bonegilla 1916 through extensive literary devices.We learn individuals
perceptions of place and their ability to adjust to new places governs their ability to belong and feel
at home with new cultures.
An individuals perception of the surrounding landscape will govern and influence their ability to
reconcile a sense of belonging within the community.This message is highlighted through the
character of Romulus who displays pessimist perceptions ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
An individuals sense of belonging within society is governed by their perspectives and views
towards their environment and landscape,their own ability to adjust and appreciate the environment
governs whether they can feel at home with their setting or alienate themselves from new cultures
and long for old traditions.Raimond Gaita's Romulus My Father and Manfred Jurgensen's Bonegilla
1961 reflect the consequences of negative perceptions and an inability to understand new landscapes
which lead to negative consequences.
Finding a sense of belonging to a place can influence an individual's sense of acceptance within the
community and culture or opposingly can enhance their sense of isolation and alienation from
society. SOLID OPENING This is reflected through Raimond Gaita's memoir Romulus My Father
UNDERLINE and Manfred Jurgensen's poem Bonegilla 1916 61? SINGLE QUOTE MARKS FOR
THE TITLES OF POEMS through extensive literary devices. INCLUDE SOME MORE
INFORMATION ABOUT EACH TEXT We learn individuals perceptions of place and their ability
to adjust to new places governs their ability to belong and feel at home with new cultures. GOOD
REINFORCEMENT OF THESIS
An individuals APOSTROPHE perception of the surrounding landscape will govern and influence
their
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Article 9.3 : What Counts As Inability For Perform?
Article 9.3 – What counts as inability to perform? A promisor's absence of readiness or willingness
to perform amounts to an inability to perform the contract if the promisor was wholly and finally
disabled from performing the contract when the promisee terminated the performance. In order to
establish repudiation by factual inability, the promisee must prove that the promisor was wholly and
finally disabled from performing the contract at the time of termination at the time when
performance was due. In accordance with the general principle of termination, a promisee may rely
on a valid ground even though it is not stated at the time of termination. Termination may be upheld,
even if the grounds for termination were erroneous. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
For example, in Rawson v Hobbs3. the High Court held that the purchaser of a grazing property
could rely on the vendor 's inability to convey title when it was clear that the vendor would not be
able to obtain the consent of a government Minister, required by the contract, to the transfer of title.
Citati is the leading case in factual inability, and concerned the charterparty of a ship, for the
carriage of cargo from Basrah to Buenos Aires. The charterers had agreed to ensure the ship was
loaded by a particular time, however when the vessel arrived in Basrah, the charterparty had not
nominated a shipper or loading berth and the lay days commenced to run. Citati terminatined the
chartparty before the expiry of the given time, on the ground that the chartparty could not load the
vessel in time and had repudiated the contract. Devilin K held that Citati could not have discharged
his obligation to load pror to the expiry of the lay days, however this did not jusdity termination as
the loading term was not a condition of the contract. In order to prove that Citati was wholly and
finally disabled from perfroming, the shipowners were required to prove that the delay would have
lasted so long as to 'frustrate' the commercial purpose of the chartparty. Devlin j considered that the
shipowners had proved Citati was wholly and finally disabled from performing. The case was
remitted to the arbitrator for determination of whether the
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Sherman Alexie And Krugman Essay
Nelson Mandela once said that "As long as poverty, injustice and gross inequality persist in our
world, none of us can truly rest" (Mandela). Mandela quote personifies the attitudes that the author
Sherman Alexie, and Paul Krugman have towards the rift of poverty in the United States. The state
of social unrest between economic classes in the United States has been a major issue for
generations, and continues to be a problem to this day. This separation between economic classes in
America has caused a rift to be formed, and throughout the history of the United States, this rift is
yet to be repaired. It is this rift that causes those individuals that are trapped in poverty to face
problems trying to escape it. This inability to escape poverty is explored by booth Sherman Alexie,
and Paul Krugman in both of their respective readings, and although they don't tell different stories,
... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In his reading, Alexie voice his frustration at his parent for them bei9ng stuck in n poverty, only for
him to realize that it is not his parents' fault for the families' unfortunate situation. As Alexie
describes "my parents came for poor people, who came from poor people, who came from poor
people, all the way back to the first poor people" (Alexie 11). In this quote, Alexie explains that his
parents aren't to blame for their unfortunate situation, and neither are his anosetror, but rather the
people responsible for Alexie and his people's poverty is the ruling whether class that has oppressed
them for hundreds of years. Alexie's ancestors were not born poor, but rather when the Europeans
sailed over from Europe, they began to take advantage of the Native Americans, taking their land,
resources, and future away from them. Krugman makes a similar point to Alexie's in his reading
when he blames the ruling, wealthier class for the continued rate of poverty in
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Lesson Learned 3 : Inability
Lesson learned 3: Inability to identify exact requirements and inability to control scope change
Scope management begins at the beginning of a project. In the planning process group, two types of
"Scope" need to be carefully defined: product scope and project scope. The product scope here
would be the features and functions requirements of the e–Borders system. The project scope here
should be how the work would be done including the deadline for the project completion. A scope
baseline need to be approved with the project scope statement plan and work breakdown structure
defined. After the scope baseline is formed, any change to the scope should be performed with a
formal change control procedure. The e–Boarders project ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
The detailed solution design was developed after Raytheon had been awarded the contract. "The
Department had incorporated Raytheon's proposed design within the contract with the company. But
the proposals had been based on too high–level requirements, leading to disputes after contract
award over whether proposals would meet actual needs." [2]. Here, the high–level requirements
could not serve the purpose of scopes which would state what was included and what was not. This
is the fundamental cause of prolonged time span and overrun budget of this project. Because the
Home office failed to objectively define detailed scopes, controlling of the scope became very
difficult. "the Department has little clear idea of how it expects business processes to change." [2].
And the fact that the Home office has little knowledge of managing changes did not help. Proper
change control procedure mentioned before had no signs of appearing throughout the project.
However, because there was no scope baseline from the Department, requirements inevitably needed
to be growing and shifting all the time. As the result of this, the Home office would think Raytheon's
work unsuccessful, while Raytheon would find that it was the requirements change that hindered
their processes. Therefore, the lesson learned here is that for a complex project, a well–developed,
well–validated set of requirements is extremely important. Also, a proper change control procedure
ensures
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Pinned to the Wall: J. Alfred Prufrock and the Inability...
Pinned to the Wall: J. Alfred Prufrock and the Inability to Change If people are disappointed with
themselves and what they have become, then there are naturally two options for remedy. One is to
do whatever possible to change themselves and pave a brighter future. The second, perhaps less
desirable, is to realize that change is useless or near–impossible, which leads to either finding peace
in the way things are or recognizing the hopelessness in the absence of the way things could be. T.S.
Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" reaffirms the uselessness of change (FINISH). This
reflective yet despairing poem is the lament of a man who, though he would like to muster up the
courage to become something else, is trapped by an ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
If inner change is even possible in this poem at first glance, it is certainly thwarted by an
environment that does not even seem to care at all that our narrator exists. Additionally, Prufrock is
surrounded by a scene where impermanence reigns, where "women come and go talking of
Michelangelo" and people seem less than eager to understand that time is of the essence. Prufrock
longs to repeatedly convince himself that "there will be time" for anything he wishes to do, be it
"murder and create" or "prepare a face to meet the faces that [he will] meet" (Eliot 27–28).
However, he understands the precariousness of time, namely that it is a precious, finite resource that
does not allow for an infinite number of modifications to one's own life. A "hundred...revisions" to
Prufrock's lifestyle would not really matter if all of these are delicate enough such that "a minute
will reverse" them anyway (Eliot 33, 48). Prufrock understands the grim underlying reality that
there is not much time after all and implies this society in which he lives is drenched in its "empty
fullness of its life" (Schneider 1104). In fact, the promise of time is a false consolation here, a
"pathological insistence" by Prufrock to scrape up the seconds as they quickly fall through his
fingers (Cahill 8).
This reliance on time as a tool to change himself loses further validity in the face of Prufrock's
impending
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What Is Alzheimer's Disease (AD)?
Alzheimers What is Alzheimers (AD)? Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a brain disorder which will
slowly diminish memory and other vital functions of the brain over time. The brain cells slowly and
continuously deteriorate, resulting in the weakening of memory and mental performance. Its major
effect is the loss of intellect, grave enough to lose social skills and restrict day–to–day living. The
disease progresses gradually and becomes more critical as time passes by. There is no known
treatment to stop its development. Although being physically and mentally healthy may lessen the
danger of AD, there are no known drugs that can diminish the threat. The rate at which AD
progresses vary from person to person, but the average life prospect of
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generalist intervention model for the inability to focus
This case is pertains to a 43 year old female named Elizabeth Slone; the client is having problems
with maintaining structured thought processes. She believes that her Obsessive Compulsive
Disorder and Attention Deficit Disorder are battling in her mind, so using the Generalist
Intervention Model Elizabeth and I will manage everything from engagement to the follow–up, a
structured technique of planned changes for addressing her tribulations. I am hoping to help her put
together a plan, in turn put together a plan of action that can help label things and sort them out.
Engagement The client entered my office this morning and proceeded to sit down in a chair in which
I have place beside my desk, this is so that I may turn and have face ... Show more content on
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Elizabeth is afraid of how the public such as the ones that she deals with on a regular basis will
perceive her if they knew that she could not control her thoughts or emotions, especially since she
has so much involvement with many volunteer projects. Psychological Issues My client began
opening up about her childhood and has expressed to me that even though they were financially well
off things were no better, emotionally it was a roller coaster. When she was young and was kept
from seeing her father, there was continuous fighting between the two parents and this was usually
over the children or the child support money. Even though there were other siblings and at one time
they were close, but something changed which interfered with their opportunity to bond as siblings
are suppose to. Thi is as far as I
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
A Separate Peace Gene And Finny Character Analysis
The two protagonists' inability to reveal their inside feelings to each other plagues Gene and Finny
throughout the novel A Separate Peace by John Knowles. Gene's jealousy and Finny's personality
are main reasons why this conflict exists. Competition and rivalry theme Gene's paranoia and
Finny's inability to accept the truth, which leads to tragedy. The competition within the friendship,
Gene's inability to share his feelings with Finny, and Gene's paranoia are main factors in the
development of the conflict that leads to Gene jouncing the limb. One example of Gene's paranoia is
when Finny first forces Gene to jump off the tree, Gene ponders to himself, "Why did I let Finny
talk me into stupid things like this? Was he getting some kind ... Show more content on
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There are multiple examples of Finny and Gene's inability to accept the truth of what happened at
the tree. The first one is when Gene admits to Finny that he jounced the limb, but Finny refuses to
accept it, calling Gene a "damn fool" (70), and ordering him to go away. This leads Gene to question
himself whether he had actually deliberately caused Finny to fall. Gene contemplates, "Could it be
that he might even be right? Had I really and definitely and knowingly done it to him after all" (70)?
The final and most controversial example of their inability to accept the truth is when Finny can't
stand the "investigation" of what happened happened at the tree. After a continued dialogue about
what happened, Leper seems to know the truth. But before he is convinced to uncover the mystery,
Phineas interrupts, proclaiming that, "[He doesn't] care" (176). Finny subsequently walks across the
room and answers in an outburst to Brinker, "You get the rest of the facts, Brinker! You get all your
facts! You collect every f–––ing fact there is in the world," then plunges out of the door only to fall
down the marble steps, re–injure himself, and eventually die during the recovery surgery. Had Finny
and Gene accepted the devastating truth between each other and in each of their minds, the story
would conclude earlier and Finny would never have
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Willy's Inability to Adapt to Modern Society in Death of a...
Willy Loman is an old salesman (63 years old) who is no longer able to earn a living. He receives
only a small commission as he ages, and he slowly loses his mind and attempts to kill himself by
inhaling gas from the water heater or from crashing his Studebaker. Dave Singleman is his role
model, he wants to become well liked and rich. He spends most of his time dreaming instead of
doing anything to improve his life. He is obsessed with the post–war interpretation of the American
Dream. In the end, he kills himself by crashing his car, hoping to get the life insurance money for
his family.
He is fervently determined to succeed in his contemporary competitive society. In a conversation
with his children about Bernard, he enumerates a few ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
(Miller 86)
It gets obvious that next to becoming successful, Willy also longs to be regarded by other people, he
wants to be known and popular, he does not want to lead the life of a nobody. However, it is not
enough for him to be liked; Willy wants to be "well liked". Charley realizes this strong need of Willy
to be respected and liked by everybody, but when being asked why everybody has to like him; Willy
knows no answer to this (Miller 104). In my eyes, Willy's need to be liked shows that he has many
self–doubts. He does not want anybody to think that he might not be the successful salesperson he
pretends to be. For that reason, he always longs for reassurance that other people – mostly people
who have success, like Charley and Bernard – are not well liked either. (Miller 30, 33). To sum it up,
Willy presumes "[...] a brash personality, a ready smile, a fast joke, and a glittering appearance – as
the key to fame and fortune [...]" (Nelson 105). Does Willy fail because of society or does society let
him fail?
One of the reasons for Willy's failure is that he cannot adapt to modern society. He tends to compare
the past with the present, he is not able to let go of the past and accept the present times and the
changes that have taken place within the society. He repeats that things were better in the old days
when "[...] old man Wagner was alive [...]" (Miller 10). At that time, the business world had still
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sheriff Court Case Study
1.
The first ground was that he believed the senior judges had wrongly interpreted the meaning of the
word "inability" found in section 12 (1) of the Sheriff Courts (Scotland) Act 1971. The appellant
thought the meaning of "inability" was to be restricted to the narrow interpretation allowing the
reasons behind unfitness for duty to be limited to physical or mental infirmity as oppose to the wider
interpretation of including any form of incapability to perform the role of a judge. He believed that
parliament never intended for "inability" to be widely interpreted as section 12 (1) of the 1971 act
was intended to be read in relation to the historic legislative provisions for the removal of sheriffs
from office in particular the Heritable Jurisdictions
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
How Does Phosphorus Cause Stunted Growth
It is predicted that the removal of plant nutrients in general will result in stunted growth and death of
the plant. If phosphurus is removed from a plant, effects will include stunted growth, An abnormal
dark green colour, and a reddish–purple pigment excess amounts of sugars. Phosphorus is a
component of the complex nucleic acid structure of plants, which regulates protein synthesis.
Phosphorus is, therefore, important in cell division and development of new tissue. Phosphorus is
also associated with complex energy transformations in the plant. This is why phosphurus
deficiency in plants will cause stunted growth. Phosphurus deficent plants will have a dark green
colour due to the fact that phosphurus deficiency causes excess biuildup of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Amy Tan Mother Tongue Summary
In "Mother Tongue," Amy Tan reflects on her experience with the controversy of the negative
impact from faulty communication. She details the negative impact of faulty communication
through conversations, meaningful relationships, and career opportunities. Tan describes the
abundance of "Englishes" she grew up to know from her peers. Her mother's "English" stood out
from the others because of her inability to communicate well. Most individuals considered Tan's
mother's language "broken" or "limited" because of her faulty communication. Limited language
proficiency negatively affects a person's quality of life. Limitations of a person's language affect
their communication with other individuals. Therefore, the inability to speak with conciseness ...
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Tan describes her love towards the power of language and the abundance of "Englishes" she grew
up to know. She begins to write fiction, but realizes her intention to master the English language
fails. Once she realizes she writes for the wrong audiences, her envision changes: "Apart from what
any critic had to say about my writing, I knew I had succeeded where it counted when my mother
finished reading my book and gave me her verdict: 'So easy to read'" (Tan, p. 320). Tan thought her
career involved writing fiction to intelligent audiences, but she struggles with communicating with
them. Her inability to communicate to an intellectual audience affects the career opportunity for her,
which results in her change in perspective of her intended audience. Additionally, Tan's mother loses
independency when she cannot handle situations on her own. She emphasizes her mother's struggle
to help herself as a result of her limitations of English. Tan describes, "When I was fifteen, she used
to have me call people on the phone to pretend I was she" (Tan, p.318). Her mother did not receive
respect from individuals because of the way she communicates with them; consequently, in order to
receive respect, she utilizes her daughter's ability to communicate well. Tan's mother's limitations
affect her opportunities of independency. As a result, a person's inability to communicate negatively
affects their
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Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a generic, lethal...
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a generic, lethal condition characterized by an inability to will
voluntary muscles as desired. The motor neurons responsible for exciting muscular contractions are
deficient and loss of usage in voluntary muscles results in their atrophy. Characterized early in life,
children with SMA exhibit difficulty in early voluntary muscular activities such as crawling,
sucking, imitation of facial expressions, and breathing. Three stage of SMA exist: SMA I for
children younger than six months, SMA II for children between 6–18 months of age, and SMA III
for all remaining children. For many affected individuals, life expectancy depends upon the time in
which symptoms began. The longer it takes for SMA ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Genetics of Spinal Muscular Atrophy
In 1995 a French group of researchers discovered that SMA is autosomal recessive disorder due to
loss of the survival motor neuron protein gene (SMN) (Lefebvre et al., 1995). Through
experimentation the researchers discovered two copies of the SMN gene in chromosome five [chr
5q13.2]: telomeric and centromeric SMN copies. Experimentation proved that loss of the telomeric
SMN (today known as SMN1) and not loss of its centromeric counterpart, SMN2, resulted in SMA.
It took an additional six years for researchers to glimpse at the functions provided by SMN1.
Meister et al. categorized the SMN1 protein an essential to promote correct assembly of U12 small
ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs). In genetics, snRNPs are nucleic proteins responsible for the splicing
of premature ribonucleic acid chains (pre–mRNA) derived from genes. Without correct splicing,
mature ribonucleic acid chains (mRNAs) produce dysfunctional proteins when translated. In this
case, splicing functionality of U12 – intron containing transcripts is lost, and because the transcript
is wrongly coded, its translation will produce a functionless protein. Hence, loss of SMN1 results in
an inability form U12 snRNPs splicing complexes, and reduced splicing functionality results in loss
of U12 – intron splicing functionality (Patel and Steitz, 2003). Only recently (2012) did researchers
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Nonsense Is Defined by Its Inability to be Defined Lewis...
The definition of nonsense has been debated throughout literature. Yet nonsense itself cannot be
defined, but rather it is defined by its inability to be defined. It's the destruction or defiance of the
norm that often leads to creation of nonsense. The language of nonsense itself is closely intertwined
with various techniques of style, structuralization and various motifs. Authors such as Lewis Caroll
in Alice and Wonderland and Edward Lear's The Complete Nonsense of Edward Lear use such
techniques to invoke the language of nonsense as well as to create nonsense within their writing.
Both Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear use the language of nonsense is also defined by paradoxes, the
play on stereotypes, and the usage of polysemy. Lewis ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In such a structure, Lear creates a paradox in that he uses various stereotypes of each individual that
he chooses and breaks and defies that stereotype. In the creation of such limericks, Lear is specific
in choosing adjectives; he uses places such as 'Portugal', 'Madras', etc. In such places there is an
assumption of a stereotype of the individuals from those places, yet instead of creating that
stereotype he creates nonsensical actions for those individuals. Both Carroll and Lear use polysemy
throughout their nonsense. Polysemy can be defined as words or phrases having multiple meanings.
Carroll uses polysemy in the fact that the creatures often take specific words for face value. For
instance, the word mad has multiple meanings, it can either mean angry or crazed. Carroll is very
careful to create 'the mad hatter' and the 'as mad as a March hare' as the same individual (Carroll).
Yet it is in this matter that also fuels the nonsensical element has the 'mad hatter' becomes a paradox.
Lear uses polysemy as well throughout his limericks. For instance, "There was an Old Person of
Leeds/Whose head was infested with beads..."(Lear, 12). The word 'beads' could refer to the things
that jewelry is made of or a reference to ones sanity (i.e. often called marbles in today's society).
Such a play on words allow for the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Holden’s Problem Is Not ‘Phonies’ but His Inability to...
Holden's problem is not 'phonies' but his inability to accept reality." Do you agree? Holden Caulfield
main problem is with all the phonies that surround him and irk him. Reading extensively through the
novel; we can confirm that Holden throughout the book is continuously tormented by the acts of
these phonies who are superficial and hypocritical. Throughout the novel Holden meets various
phonies who commit phony acts. One such case is when he first arrived at the Edmont Hotel and he
saw these couples squirting highballs water at each other. Another case is of him witnessing another
phony act is when he goes on a date with Sally Hayes but they bump into one of Sally's phony
friend, George. This part of the book really highlights ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Just before leaving he meets Lillian Simmons who is one of his brother D.B's, ex's. She tried
striking up a conversation with Holden but the only reason why she talked to Holden is to find out
how his brother was doing not in how Holden was doing himself. She even goes as far to ask
Holden to pass on a message to his brother if he ever gets the chance. After she goes to leave, her
date and Holden say that they were glad to have met each other, which was a phony thing to do as
Holden wasn't glad at all to have met him. In a way though it would be safe to say that Holden is
one of the biggest phonies in the book for example such as when he first arrives at the Edmont Hotel
and sees a couple squirting water at each other faces. Though Holden says he is probably the most
normal person in the hotel full of perverts he then does a phony act when he becomes of a hypocrite
of what he just says and gets turned on by what he sees. He also goes as far to try and get lucky with
Faith Cavendish. This is not the only time he goes back on his word when he does the same acts he
accuses other people being phony for. Phoniness becomes a large theme in the novel and is one of
Holden's biggest problems not only because of the people he meets but also because he is one of the
biggest phonies in the
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Person Inabilities Definition
Do Person's Inabilities Define Who They Are? Imagine going to sleep able to see, then waking up
the next morning not being able to see. What would you do if the doctors told you that they did not
know what happened or how to help you? Imagine you are on your way to the store and another car
hits you and you are paralyzed. What would you if you woke up in the hospital and the doctors told
you that you would never be able to walk again? Would you be able to go day by day wheeling
yourself around? According to Rioiriri could you "easily find housing that is accessible to you, with
no barriers to your mobility". Imagine you have a stroke and the doctors tell you that you will never
be able to talk again, and that you had six months to live. Imagine one day out of nowhere, you can
no longer hear anything. What would you do if some of your abilities became your inabilities?
When I was four years old I heard my named and then a loud bump in the middle of the night. It was
my mom who had fallen in the floor who was unresponsive when I got to her. I called 911, then ran
next door which my little sister's Godmother lived and got her up. She came over and called my
grandmother, while waiting on the ambulance. When we got to the hospital the doctor said that my
mom had a stroke. I did not know it at the time but they gave her six months to live. They told her ...
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This may be great way of communication but the problem is very few people know sign language.
Why do we not as an environment not push ourselves and our children to learn sign language just
like we learn any other language? Since there are not as many people that do not know sign
language there is a language barrier. When there is any kind of barrier between people you many
have some misunderstanding. This is where you will have those people tease or walk all over people
because of their inabilities to do
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
What Is Achebe's Inability To Understand Conrad?
Achebe's Inability to Understand Conrad's Heart of Darkness
A fierce Achebe radically condemns Conrad as "a thoroughgoing racist" in his article, arguing that
Heart of Darkness is not a piece of great literature, but "an offensive and deplorable book" (Achebe
1791). He structures his argument around a few central ideas, such as the grotesque perception of
the Africans by the protagonist, the antinomy between the Thames and Congo River, the lack of
historical fact, and the parallel between the African and the European women, among others.
Achebe misinterprets Conrad's work, and exhibits opacity to the narrative's message. He seems to
purport, as any reader, a subjective interpretative reading of Conrad's book, with the peculiarity ...
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The reader has another type of anxiety than the one mentioned by Achebe: s/he anxiously waits to
see if any truly significant contact with Africa, its people, or its culture occurs throughout the book.
Instead, the phrase "Nowhere did we stop long enough to get a particularized impression," is
emblematic, and indicative that this contact does not, and probably will not happen (Conrad 19).
Conrad assumes no task of presenting a good, objective or factual image of Africa, as Achebe would
prefer; instead he critically exposes a refraction of this image in the European white middle class
tainted perception. Indeed, many "normal readers," whom Achebe credits to be "well armed to
detect and resist" underhand activity from the part of a writer, read into the novel its universal
psychological implications that override Africanness or Europeanness. Marlow remains insulated
from any real contact with the local culture; his stuck–to–the–river journey serves to preserve a
confused and contemplative attitude in him, rather than an involved state of mind. His African
experience comprises very little fact, proves mostly sensorial, observant and rather interested in
itself as an object of study than in the surroundings. Describing the Other's eyes or looking into
them serves just as a mirror. Legend has it that Narcissus contemplated his beauty in the lake daily,
and ended up drowning in it. After his death, jealous nymphs came and whined to the lake, his
closest
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Court Cases Case Study

  • 1. Court Cases Case Study I am the advocate acting on behalf of Angie McSonorous and I would first submit that Angie met the requirements of Section 2 of the University Lecturers (Scotland) Act 1985. I will firstly establish that Angie was "required to resign" and that she was within ten years of the official retirement age. Angie was warned about her behaviour a number of times and she sought medical help, she was then diagnosed as having a mild personality defect known as "perfectio demens" and she was required to resign. The fact that Angie sought medical help and that the defect was mild and probably easily manageable shows that she would not voluntarily resign from her role when she was taking steps to control her condition. Rather, it shows that she wanted to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... I would submit that it is not binding because Angie's case is likely being heard in the outer house and their decisions are not horizontally binding meaning they do not need to be followed. Despite the Stewart case being a highly persuasive case, it is not binding in terms of interpretation as it involves different statutory provisions. I would also argue that the broader interpretation of "inability" in the case of Stewart should not be binding on Angie's case because the ordinary meaning of the word would produce an anomaly in Angie's case. The anomaly being that a person dismissed for misconduct that was avoidable would receive a pension, whereas a person dismissed for a personality defect like Angie which was not their fault would not be eligible for a pension. This anomaly is a reason why the ordinary meaning of "inability" should not be used and instead the narrow meaning of only physical or mental infirmity should be used. For all the foregoing reasons, the narrow interpretation of "inability" is appropriate for the 1985 act and Angie's reason for resignation is not included in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5. King Henry's Inability To Sleep As he describes in his soliloquy, King Henry is vexed by his inability to sleep, and this state bestows upon him feelings of confusion and frustration. The King's use of imagery in describing the living conditions of lesser individuals who are able to sleep and his own help to convey his attitude towards his insomnia. Before the start of the periodic sentence on line 15, the King Henry presents the reader with images of the vile conditions in which the peasants live and the entity of sleep chooses to reside, pointing out the repulsive beds, poor living spaces, and the melody of the "buzzing night–flies" that sounds throughout the area. Within this description, he inserts images of his own luxurious living quarters, where the "sweetest melody" is the lullaby of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Almost immediately, he apostrophizes sleep, personifying it, and proceeds to ask a number of questions to the newly–conceived entity; his inquiries, which are rhetorical in nature, question sleep's reasoning behind his insomnia. These show up numerously and in quick succession, indicating that he does not understand his sleeplessness, and is pleading for answers out of desperation; however, he maintains a formal, non–accusatory tone when inquiring. This reserve, however, gradually deteriorates, and the strength of his hysteria takes control of his language at line 15, manifesting itself in the form of a breathless periodic sentence. The tension increases throughout the sentence, and breakless structure indicates that the King's attitude is approaching emotional hysteria. He ends his monologue with a synecdoche, noting that "uneasy lies the head that wears a crown;" he himself is completely vexed by his current state. Ultimately, the syntax suggests that the attitude of the King is that of desperation; he pleads for answers, and his frustration mounts as any type of concrete explanation goes ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9. Society's Inability To Change In Hamlet Society's Inability to Change At some point in everyone's life they seem to go through a rough patch, which almost always results in irrational behavior. This is exactly what we see in the famous Shakespearian play Hamlet. In the play, Hamlet goes through a countless number of tragic events that cause him to experience a plethora of emotions. Some of these crazy dramatic situations include the death of his father, his mother marrying his uncle, his uncle becoming king, and, most important of all, the death of his true love Ophelia. It was Hamlet's inability to control his emotions that caused all of this pain in his life. Whether it was through Hamlet's inability to get help for what he was feeling, bringing others feelings down with him, or believing that violence was the answer to his problems, these are situations that are still very relevant in the world in which we live. Throughout the entire story, Hamlet was never able to completely share his ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It seems that the common thread of violence is linked to wanting revenge for another's death. We see this theme of violence in Hamlet, Laertes, and also Fortinbras, on their path of seeking ultimate revenge. While both Fortinbras and Larities didn't think twice about getting revenge, Hamlet wanted to know all of the facts before he was willing to kill Claudius (Act III Scene II). The need for loved ones to seek revenge for murder is still something we see today, but the type of revenge has changed. In Hamlet the only means of revenge seemed to be killing the person just as they had killed your loved one. In this modern day you may see the occasional revenge similar to those in Hamlet, but murder is much less acceptable today than it was in their time period. A similar type of revenge that you might see today is lobbying for the perpetrator to get convicted for murder or have them receive the death ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10.
  • 11.
  • 12.
  • 13. Ability 's Inability ( Rough Draft ) Ability's Inability (Rough Draft) When considering Christian allegories that have been written through the years, one has stood out from the rest. This piece of literature has stood the test of time and remained beloved by many readers. In "Class Formation, Politics, Structures of Feeling" Geoff Eley states "Pilgrim 's Progress is, with Rights of Man, one of the two foundational texts of the English working–class movement: Bunyan and Paine, with Cobbett and Owen, contributed most to the stock of ideas and attitudes which make up the raw material of the movement from 1790–1850" (Eley 217). The Pilgrim's Progress was written by John Bunyan in February of 1678. At the time, Bunyan titled it "The Pilgrim 's Progress from This World to That Which Is to Come; Delivered under the Similitude of a Dream". In modern publications of the work, Bunyan's sequel to the work titled simply "Pilgrim's Progress, Part II" has been added at the end of the original tale. Although the two tales were not originally published back to back, reading them one after the other shows the striking differences between them. Bunyan specifically used different events, people, and circumstance in the two different parts to symbolically show how Christian life can vary greatly depending upon the individual. John Bunyan's readers wanted the story in The Pilgrim's Progress to continue beyond the original tale. Two years after publishing the original story, Bunyan wrote his first sequel to The Pilgrim's Progress ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
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  • 16.
  • 17. Sensory Model Of Agnosia Essay The main sensory models of agnosia are: visual, tuctile and auditory 1.Visuval agnosia: is the inability to identify & recognize familiar people & objects even when they have intact perception of that object.Lesions in the left occipital and temporal lobe leads to this kind of agnosia there are two types of visual agnosia: Appreceptive visual agnosia: display the ability to see contours and outline when Shown an object but they experience difficulty if asked to categorise objects.It is also known as visual space agnosia, which is a condition in which a person fails to recognize objects due to functional impairment of the occipito–temporal visual areas of the brain, while other visual functions are intact such as: colour vision, brightness ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Auditory agnosia: difficulty to distinguish between environmental sound and verbal and nonverbal sounds Auditory verbal agnosia: difficulty to recognise words which are spoken as simultaneously meaningful Phonagnosia: inability to recognise a familer voices even if they are able to hear and understand the words used Other than the three major forms of agnosia, there are many other types as listed below: Finger agnosia Loss of knowledge or the inability to find meaning or differences associated with different fingers on the hand ie, difficulties with naming the fingers correctly, as well as pairing the fingers with their meaning Topographical agnosia: is is the loss or difficulty in learning of previously familiar routes, layout, maps, places etc due to damage in right parietal lobe.It includes difficulty with orienting themselves in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
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  • 20.
  • 21. Stereotypes In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men "When people rely on surface appearances and false racial stereotypes, rather than in–depth knowledge of others at the level of the heart, mind, and spirit, their ability to access and understand people accurately is compromised"– James A. Forbes. In the novel, "Of Mice and Men" written by John Steinbeck, George and Lennie are a dynamic duo. George relies on Lennie's lack of knowledge and mental capacity for friendship and Lennie relies on George's quick wits and knowledge for guidance. In other terms, George is stereotyped as a genius and Lennie is stereotyped as a mindless, brute. As the story proceeds, George and Lennie meet a swamper by the name of Candy that is stereotyped as useless due to his missing hand. People are commonly stereotyped based upon first glances and mental capabilities such as Lennie's lack of knowledge and inability to retain information and Candy's uselessness ,for he his missing a hand. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Lennie constantly forgets information and feels bad. "'Lennie looked startled and then in embarrassment hid his face behind his knees.'I forgot again."'(Steinbeck 6). Lennie often feels embarrassed because of his disabilities. His disability prevents Lennie from retaining the information that he receives. Due to this condition Lennie is not perceived as others by smart, but as stupid. Lennie's inability to remember bits of information makes him feel embarrassed and stereotyped as ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22.
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  • 24.
  • 25. The Inability To Compromise Analysis The Inability to Compromise "But this momentous question, like a fire bell in the night, awakened and filled me with terror..." As eloquently outlined by Thomas Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence and the 3rd President of the United States, accurately forecasted the rising danger and hostility surrounding the question of the expansion of slavery. Throughout the 19th Century, the United States underwent drastic technological and cultural transformations resulting in the rise of previously unobserved controversies concerning slavery. However, opposing opinions rapidly rose in response to these issues. As observed through the disagreements surrounding the economic, social, and political differences between the North and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Emerging over the balance of free and slave states, regional ideology directly impacted the discussion of allowing California into the Union as a free state on Congress's floor in the late 1840's. Ultimately, this controversy became resolved in the Compromise of 1850, which allowed California into the Union while strengthening the Federal Fugitive Slave Law appeasing Southerners. Agreement rapidly dissipated when the territory of Kansas applying for statehood conducted multiple fraudulent votes concerning the issue of allowing slavery within its borders. Realizing the necessity of outside help, the federal government imposed itself I the issue and recognized Kansas as a free state. Southerners were outraged. Throughout the South, the belief that the federal government consistently overstepped its constitutional authority firmly implanted itself following the acceptance of Kansas as a free state. Adding fuel to the flames, in 1857, the Supreme Court case of Dred Scott v. Sandford bestowed "legal reasoning" to Southerners looking for justification against the federal government. Reaching an unavoidable turning point, the Presidential election of 1860 promised historic consequences. Political leaders spread over the South promised that if the Republican candidate for President, Abraham Lincoln, won ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26.
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  • 29. When Does Hamlet To Kill His Father's Suicide Hamlet written by William Shakespeare illustrates the thoughts and feelings of the main character Hamlet as he tries to avenge the death of his father, King Hamlet. The death of Hamlet's father first starts as an accidental death, but the ghost of King Hamlet who is still in purgation tells Hamlet that it was not accidental. The ghost/King Hamlet tells his son, Hamlet, that he was actually murdered by his brother Claudius by the use of poison. After finding out the truth about his father's death, Hamlet is given three injunctions by the ghost/his father in order to avenge his death, these include: remove the incest from the crown, leave your mother to god and her own guilt, and do not taint your mind. As the play progresses, Hamlet does his ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... One of Hamlet's three injunctions is to remove insest from the crown. In other words, he is supposed to kill King Claudius. Hence, Hamlet should kill King Claudius when given the chance; but he is unable to do so since his tragic flaw prevents him. When Hamlet walks in on King Claudius praying, he has already been persuaded enough to know that Claudius did murder his father. But, since King Claudius is praying, Hamlet's tragic flaw of his inability to act is evident. This is because he believes that if he kills King Claudius while he is praying, he will just send him to heaven because he had already purged his sins. This can be seen through the quotation stated by Hamlet, "Now I might do it {pat,} now he is a–praying" (3.3.77). Shortly after stating this quotation, Hamlet elaborates on if he should Kill Claudius now by stating, "A villain kills my father, and for that, / I, his sole son, do this same villain send / To heaven (3.3.81–83). Therefore, Hamlet is given the chance to kill King Claudius, but is not able to act on it because King Claudius is praying at that time. Hamlet then believes that if he kills King Claudius now, King Claudius would just go to heaven and that would be Hamlet's revenge. His revenge for his father's death would only be a favor to King Claudius because Claudius has already asked for forgiveness for his sins. Thus, killing him now would only send him to heaven. Hamlet's tragic flaw of his inability to act is evident in this scene because he is not able to kill King Claudius just because he is praying. Hamlet came up with an excuse to make up for his inability to act, but in reality he was just trying to hide that he couldn't act on revenge to King Claudius yet. Overall, Hamlet's tragic flaw of not being able to act is evident when he is not able to obtain revenge on King Claudius because he is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 33. Effects Of Inability To Focus The article talks about how this inability to focus hurts other aspects, such as the ability to cook something without burning it. People get distracted and forget that they have stuff in the oven. This actually happened to me once. I had started boiling some water to make some soup, and then I got distracted with some technology and forgot the pot was on the stove. All of the water had evaporated and it started to create smoke which I didn't even notice until just before the fire alarm went off. Technology really does affect our inability to focus. It also talks about how technology may have caused the children to receive poor grades. The son mentioned in the article had a ton of programs and applications available to him on his computer, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 37. Describe The Circumstances That Contributed To My... The circumstances that contributed to my inability to meet the required gpa was the fact that the second semester was my first real semester as a student. Throughout the semester I was dealing with the after math of my car accident. I was called by law enforcement staff to testify against the man that hit me. We went to court and the state declared him giulty and was sent to jail because he had no assets to pay my medical bills. The case was solved but my medical bills were not payed by the man that hit me. My family and I cannot offord to pay my medical bills, which added stress to my plate. I carry a big responsibility at home. Due to my mothers illness she is not able to take care of the household, so that responibility is left for me to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 41. The Man Of The Crowd And Ligeia By Edgar Allen Poe In Edgar Allen Poe's, "The Man of the Crowd" and "Ligeia", and Nathaniel Hawthorne's, "Young Goodman Brown," there is a constant presence of darkness throughout each text. The darkness displayed in these works allude to the ongoing theme of the ambiguity of sin. Both authors, Poe and Hawthorne, are considered to be Dark Romantics because they both center their works around the conflict between good and evil in every individual and showcase the dark side of human nature. In using elements from Dark Romanticism, Poe and Hawthorne create characters who struggle in their ability to find one's own true self, resulting in character's inability to accept and understand others because they are incapable of accepting sin, thus preventing the characters from then accepting themselves. In each of the stories, there lies an overwhelming distrust and lack of acceptance of others. Poe and Hawthorne begin each of their short stories by demonstrating each Narrator and Goodman Brown 's inability to accept others. In Poe 's "The Man in the Crowd", this is seen by the Narrator 's decision to follow the man which he cannot identify. The Narrator makes the decision to follow the man as it would allow him "a good opportunity of examining his person", something he needs desperately, demonstrated in his infatuation with the man ("Man in the Crowd" 4). The Narrator 's need for identification demonstrates his inability to accept others. In Poe 's story "Ligeia", the inability of acceptance of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
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  • 45. How Did Willy And Amanda's Inability To Become A Family... Willy and Amanda's Inability to Live in Harmony with their Families In the play's "Death of a Salesman" and "The Glass Menagerie", Willy Loman and Amanda Wingfield have the opportunity to become a "family person". However, due to their character flaws, they are unable to create a loving, family atmosphere. A "family person" is someone who their children respect, look up to, and create a pleasant environment for them to grow up and pursue their aspirations. Willy Loman and Amanda Wingfield's imposing nature, inability to live in the present, obsession with wealth, and failure to accept responsibility keep them from realizing their potential to become a "family person". Willy and Amanda are way too imposing on their children, and thus cause ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Willy's obsession with success is evident from the very beginning. Willy is trying to live his dream thru his sons, who want nothing to do with his plans. Biff summarizes Willy as his family is discussing what made him act so abnormally towards his family. "He had a good dream. It's the only dream you can have–to come out number–one man."(1553) It was a good dream, but it came at the expense of his family. Biff eventually gets very frustrated at Willy's whole outlook at life and tells him" I am not a leader of men, Willy, and neither are you"(1550). Biff realizes that chasing the American dream has destroyed Willy; the only thing he can think about is money. The first priority has to be his family, and everything else can follow. Unfortunately, Willy had to bring his family into his quest for affluence. Burt Cardullo summarizes Willy's character flaw beautifully in The Columbia Journal of American Studies. "In fact, he kills himself for money. Because he confuses materialistic success with a worthiness for love, he commits suicide to give his son Biff the insurance benefit as a stake for more business." Amanda is also obsessed with becoming prosperous and just like Willy; she relies on her children to achieve success for her. For example, Amanda signs Laura up to go to Business College, so she can be successful. When Amanda finds out that Laura has been going for strolls in the park and has dropped out of school, she goes hysterical saying they will be "eating the crust of humility all their life!"(1164). Amanda doesn't care that Laura does not want to go into business; all she cares about is that now she will be poor for the rest of her life. Amanda never asked Laura what she wanted to do, just sent her to business school so she could become rich and provide generously for her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 49. Visual Agnosia Agnosia is a loss of ability to recognize objects, persons, sounds, shapes, or smells. The specific sense is not defective nor is there any significant memory loss. It is usually associated with a brain injury or neurological illness. There are 3 forms of Agnosia: Visual Agnosia. A person cannot recognize people or objects even though there is no abnormality of the eyes or the visual system. Auditory Agnosia. A person cannot hear things such as words, environmental sounds or music, but can hear other sounds. Somatosensory Agnosia. A person cannot tell what an object is by touching it. People with agnosia do not suffer from general memory loss. Patients may have visual agnosia with or without the other forms of agnosia. There ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 53. The Inability to Define Cultural Heritage Tourism Among the peculiar cultural trends to crop up during the last few decades, cultural or heritage tourism is perhaps the most socially significant and the most difficult to define. Several factors influence the fluctuating meaning of the catchall term heritage tourism, including "the rather haphazard classification of things and elements as 'heritage' because people are not quite sure exactly what this title covers" (Poria, Butler, & Airey, 2003), and the increased sensitivity expressed by government agencies to the concerns of cultural entities. Although an official designation of the term heritage tourism has been provided by the federal government, in the form of Section 7 of Executive Order 13287: Preserve America, which "defines heritage tourism as: the business and practice of attracting and accommodating visitors to a place or area based especially on the unique or special aspects of that locale's history, landscape (including trail systems), and culture" (Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, 2006), there is no established consensus between the various industries involved. This inability to define heritage tourism with any modicum of certitude has spawned an academic environment in which travel writer Pat Yale, in his book From Tourist Attractions to Heritage Tourism, classifies heritage tourism as "tourism centered on what we have inherited, which can mean anything from historic buildings, to art works, to beautiful scenery" (1997), while The National Trust ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 57. Indirect And Indirect Discrimination Discrimination barrier People with inabilities are frequently regarded as less human than the individuals who don't have a handicap, for example, individuals at school or universities annoying and harassing impaired individuals since they can't do things like taking an interest in the games on the off chance that they are the wheel seat clients, or they might be tormented on the grounds that they carry on and comprehend things uniquely in contrast to every other person. They can likewise be oppressed by individuals overpowering them excessively. For instance when somebody demands helping them with everything on the grounds that by helping them with all that they are as yet being dealt with as though they are something not as much as human. Still they are being dealt with as clearly unique and in doing as such it can likewise make them insulted and lose trust in the things they can do themselves. Disability discrimination can either be direct or indirect. Direct discrimination is the place you are dealt with less positively in view of your inability than somebody without a disability would be dealt with in similar conditions. Here is a case of direct discrimination as a result of having a disability: A bar permits a family with a child who has cerebral paralysis to drink in their beer garden however not in their family room. The family with the impaired child are not given the same decisions that different families have. Indirect discrimination is the place there is an ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 61. Why Heart Failure ( Hf ) Is The Inability Of The Heart Heart failure (HF) is the inability of the heart to pump adequately to meet the metabolic needs of the body (Jeffrey et al, 2007). It is caused by structural or functional abnormalities of the heart (NICE, 2003). The reduced contractility leads to a reduced stroke volume, and therefore the heart rate is increased to help maintain cardiac output. HF can either be chronic where it has been occurring over time or acute, where it happens suddenly. Around 900,000 people in the UK have HF, with almost as many as damaged hearts but with no symptoms (Petersen et al, 2002). The prevalence of HF increases steeply with age, with the average age at first diagnosis is at 76. The risk of HF is greater in males than in females in all age groups, but there are more females than males due to population demographics (Eggett, 2014). The cost of general practitioner consultations has been estimated at £45 million per year, with an additional £35 million for GP referrals to outpatient clinics. In addition to this, community–based drug therapy costs the NHS around £129 million per year. The hospital admissions due to HF are understood to increase by more than half in the next 25 years, largely due to the ageing population. This paper will focus on comparing and contrasting the classic verves contemporary understanding of HF, evaluating both the traditional concepts and more recent developments of the understanding of this condition. Traditional concepts of HF The understanding of HF has ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 65. The Inability of Brutus to Assume Political Leadership of... The Inability of Brutus to Assume Political Leadership of the Conspiracy Against Julius Caesar in Shakespeare's Play In Julius Caesar, Shakespeare presents a broad range of historical personalities as complicated human beings in agonizing conflict with one another and with themselves. Literary authors A.L. Rowse once wrote, "No issue hinders a man's leadership capabilities more than his confusing perception of honor, noble idealism, and inner self–conflict" (15). In his drama about power, nobility, assassination, and revenge, Shakespeare examines this particular issue best in his simple yet complex characterization of Brutus. Guided by conflicting emotions, Brutus, an idealistic man, is unable to assume ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Vexed I am Of late with passions of some difference, Conceptions only proper to myself, Which gives some soil, perhaps, to my behaviors. But let not therefore my good friends be grieved (Among which number, Cassius, be you one), Nor construe any further my neglect Than that poor Brutus, with himself at war, Forgets the shows of love to other men. (1.2. 37–46). In Scene I, Cassius utters the first in a series of persuasive remarks designed to win Brutus on the part of King 2 the conspiracy to destroy Caesar. But Brutus is incapable of assuming the leadership role as his self– conflict reflects both his personal love of Caesar and his duty to the Republic. He ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 69. Introduction. Anterograde Amnesia Is The Inability To Form Introduction Anterograde amnesia is the inability to form new memories, while keeping old memories intact. People who suffer from this impairment, are unable to encode new memories into long–term memory but are able to keep them in short term. The movie Fifty First Dates portrays this type of amnesia accurately and inaccurately. The main protagonists of Fifty First Dates are Lucy, played by Drew Barrymore, and Henry, played by Adam Sandler. Lucy suffers from anterograde amnesia due to brain damage. For the most part, the movie is accurate to the impairment and is almost exactly the same as the impairment patients suffer from. Plot of Fifty First Dates In the movie Fifty First Dates Lucy has permanent brain damage due to a car accident. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Procedural memory is usually memories associated with muscle memory where her body remembers it even if she does not. This is also true to the type of amnesia. She even dreams about Adam Sandler's character even though she is not sure how she knows him. Somehow, her encounters with him are encoded even though she doesn't remember them explicitly. A Real Life Example: FL and Similarities from the Movie What is most interesting is that the movie seems to be based off of a real incident. Smith et. al (2010) wrote about a special case of a patient named FL. She was in a car accident in 2005 and reported difficulty retaining information from one day to the next. She describes her memory as unaffected over the course of the day but when she falls asleep, the memory for each day disappears. FL also, is able to recall things from before her accident. Lucy, a fictional character created for a movie, shares many things in common with FL, thus showing that the film is accurate to the disorder. It also is interesting to know that FL like Lucy was somehow able to remember something's. According to Smith et. al (2010), "For some tests, unbeknownst to FL, material learned on the previous day was intermixed with material learned on the same day as the test." In other words, FL sometimes mixed in previously learned material that she did not recall learning due to her impairment with material that she learned that day. This idea of intermixing material was also accurate ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 73. Does Hamlet Failing To Take Action Essay Karli Coetzee 12.2 Hamlet Essay Hamlet's inability to take action due to his thoughts and need to rationalise everything Throughout the play Hamlet, Hamlet proves to be a victim in his need to rationalise everything. Hamlet is plagued with questions and uncertainty and this indecisiveness leads to his inability to take action. Hamlet's need to analyse and prove everything certain draws his time of action farther away. Hamlet doubts himself and whether or not the action that he wants to take is justifiable. Hamlet is provided by the ghost with the information that King Hamlet was murdered by Claudius, but rather than taking action immediately Hamlet questions whether the spirit "may be the devil" and decides that he will have grounds more relative than this" and first determine if Claudius did murder his father. This extends the time Hamlet waits before he takes action, proving that Hamlets thoughts and need for justification hinders him from taking action. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Hamlet deals with the concept of revenge as an act that goes against his Christian morality. This presents him with a moral dilemma as Hamlet is unsure whether he should obey his father and do what is ethically correct in society, or what is morally correct under the Christian religion. After meeting with the ghost Hamlet shows his uncertainty of what to do when he exclaims: "O all you host of heaven! O earth! what else?" Hamlets inaction due to religious beliefs is also shown when Hamlet has the opportunity to kill Claudius but refuses as he believes Claudius is praying and therefore "this same villain" will be sent "to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 77. Warlord Rule and Sun Yat Sen's Inability to Achieve the... Warlord Rule and Sun Yat Sen's Inability to Achieve the Aims of the Three People's Principles I agree with the statement only to a small extent. The period of warlord rule was particularly chaotic in China. However, even when order was being restored again, the aims of the three people's principles were not all being achieved. Therefore, I feel that warlord rule is not the most important reason as to why Sun Yat Sen was unable to achieve the aims of the three people's principles. The three people's principles are the principle of nationalism, the principle of democracy and the principle of the people's well–being. The first one is Sun Yat Sen's aim to unite the whole of China. As for the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... During this period, it was also a time of lawlessness. The warlords fought each other as they hoped to gain control over a larger territory. This brought about much suffering to the Chinese people. Sun Yat Sen's principle of democracy is not being upheld as these warlord ruled over their area like a dictator. These warlords exploited the people under them, like the peasants. Thus it is clear that Sun Yat Sen's principle's are not being achieved or even upheld. He, himself could not do anything as his party and government was still too weak. However, this period of warlord rule is not the only factor that prevented him from being unable to achieve his aims. Due to the disunity in his party, Kuomintang (KMT), he could not achieve the aims of his three principles. Before he can actually unite the whole country, he would need to unite his party members. He often met failure when he tried to reunite the country due to internal squabbles in his own party. They often argued over the third principle. Some party members wanted the land of the landlords to be taken away from them, and come under state ownership. However, there were others who disagreed. Therefore, this made it very difficult for Sun Yat Sen to get his party members to work together to achieve his aims. He soon realised he had to reorganize his movement again before he could actually topple warlord rule and unify ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 81. Psychobiological Perspective From the neurobiological perspective, outside factors mentioned may have affected the way her brain functions, factors such as the death of her father and the departure of her only child. These events may have lead to her developing a sense of loneliness and depression, and which may have led to other disorders that caused her to not function the same as she has before. The "variety" of life changes may have caused a change in routine or other, making her feel disorganized in her life, which may have translated into the way that she teaches. From the humanistic perspective, which focuses on self improvement and free will, her inability to teach effectively may have been declining due to her realising that her teaching style and lessons has been "deteriorating" as well as her ability to motivate students. She may feel as if she isn't growing as a person any longer, which may also lead to her doubting herself and her lessons, which may have snowballed into her feeling unuseful and her doubt may have grown overtime, leading to poorly planned lessons and less motivation to teach. From the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Having not much interactions with the outside world, aside from his mother and Eddie, he is prone to developing introversion, or social anxiety disorders. We can assume that his mother is not forcing him to be confined within the home, he stays at home, even on weekends, on his own free will, which shows that he may have a chance of being socially awkward. Going on a date, when the only female interaction he's had has been with his mother, may prove to be difficult, since he isn't used to interactions with others, especially strangers. His absences from an important project date at work may also be because of his social anxiety and inability to effectively communicate with his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 85. The Reasons Behind Police's Inability To Catch Jack The... The Reasons Behind Police's Inability To Catch Jack The Ripper Jack The Ripper was never caught, and his identity remains a mystery to this day. The police were unable to catch Jack The Ripper and solve the mystery of the Whit Chapel murders because of several reasons. The first reason is the police themselves. In London, there were two police forces. The Metropolitan police and the City Of London police. The murders took place in both of the jurisdictions. The police forces each had separate investigations going on and they did not share evidence or information with each other. This hampered their investigations because a vital clue being held by one police force may have linked in with evidence ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Vital clues that could have led to the capture of Jack The Ripper were overlooked. The CID, who were set up to investigate crimes like this, had only just been set up. They had very little experience of dealing with a serial killer, as this was the first one in the whole country. Because of this they did not know how to deal with the murders and how to catch Jack The Ripper and made mistakes that led to his escape. The police tried using undercover officers as bait. However, because there were no women on the force, men dressed up like women but this failed completely as the disguises were very poor. The police interviewed many witnesses over and over again. Many of these were hoaxes and the police wasted valuable time in doing this. The police also tried training bloodhounds in following the scent of Jack The Ripper, however this idea was soon abandoned as the dogs would not have been able to follow just one scent in an area that was full of different smells. The police also printed all the letters that were sent to them. This would have led to a widespread panic and would have made it harder to keep the murders undercover. They also took no heed to the warnings sent in the letters about the next victim, which led the killer being able to kill easily again. The note written on the wall was ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 89. Belonging Place Finding a sense of belonging to a place can influence an individual's sense of acceptance within the community and culture or opposingly can enhance their sense of isolation and alienation from society.This is reflected through Raimond Gaita's memoir Romulus My Father and Manfred Jurgensen's poem Bonegilla 1916 through extensive literary devices.We learn individuals perceptions of place and their ability to adjust to new places governs their ability to belong and feel at home with new cultures. An individuals perception of the surrounding landscape will govern and influence their ability to reconcile a sense of belonging within the community.This message is highlighted through the character of Romulus who displays pessimist perceptions ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... An individuals sense of belonging within society is governed by their perspectives and views towards their environment and landscape,their own ability to adjust and appreciate the environment governs whether they can feel at home with their setting or alienate themselves from new cultures and long for old traditions.Raimond Gaita's Romulus My Father and Manfred Jurgensen's Bonegilla 1961 reflect the consequences of negative perceptions and an inability to understand new landscapes which lead to negative consequences. Finding a sense of belonging to a place can influence an individual's sense of acceptance within the community and culture or opposingly can enhance their sense of isolation and alienation from society. SOLID OPENING This is reflected through Raimond Gaita's memoir Romulus My Father UNDERLINE and Manfred Jurgensen's poem Bonegilla 1916 61? SINGLE QUOTE MARKS FOR THE TITLES OF POEMS through extensive literary devices. INCLUDE SOME MORE INFORMATION ABOUT EACH TEXT We learn individuals perceptions of place and their ability to adjust to new places governs their ability to belong and feel at home with new cultures. GOOD REINFORCEMENT OF THESIS An individuals APOSTROPHE perception of the surrounding landscape will govern and influence their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 93. Article 9.3 : What Counts As Inability For Perform? Article 9.3 – What counts as inability to perform? A promisor's absence of readiness or willingness to perform amounts to an inability to perform the contract if the promisor was wholly and finally disabled from performing the contract when the promisee terminated the performance. In order to establish repudiation by factual inability, the promisee must prove that the promisor was wholly and finally disabled from performing the contract at the time of termination at the time when performance was due. In accordance with the general principle of termination, a promisee may rely on a valid ground even though it is not stated at the time of termination. Termination may be upheld, even if the grounds for termination were erroneous. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... For example, in Rawson v Hobbs3. the High Court held that the purchaser of a grazing property could rely on the vendor 's inability to convey title when it was clear that the vendor would not be able to obtain the consent of a government Minister, required by the contract, to the transfer of title. Citati is the leading case in factual inability, and concerned the charterparty of a ship, for the carriage of cargo from Basrah to Buenos Aires. The charterers had agreed to ensure the ship was loaded by a particular time, however when the vessel arrived in Basrah, the charterparty had not nominated a shipper or loading berth and the lay days commenced to run. Citati terminatined the chartparty before the expiry of the given time, on the ground that the chartparty could not load the vessel in time and had repudiated the contract. Devilin K held that Citati could not have discharged his obligation to load pror to the expiry of the lay days, however this did not jusdity termination as the loading term was not a condition of the contract. In order to prove that Citati was wholly and finally disabled from perfroming, the shipowners were required to prove that the delay would have lasted so long as to 'frustrate' the commercial purpose of the chartparty. Devlin j considered that the shipowners had proved Citati was wholly and finally disabled from performing. The case was remitted to the arbitrator for determination of whether the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 97. Sherman Alexie And Krugman Essay Nelson Mandela once said that "As long as poverty, injustice and gross inequality persist in our world, none of us can truly rest" (Mandela). Mandela quote personifies the attitudes that the author Sherman Alexie, and Paul Krugman have towards the rift of poverty in the United States. The state of social unrest between economic classes in the United States has been a major issue for generations, and continues to be a problem to this day. This separation between economic classes in America has caused a rift to be formed, and throughout the history of the United States, this rift is yet to be repaired. It is this rift that causes those individuals that are trapped in poverty to face problems trying to escape it. This inability to escape poverty is explored by booth Sherman Alexie, and Paul Krugman in both of their respective readings, and although they don't tell different stories, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In his reading, Alexie voice his frustration at his parent for them bei9ng stuck in n poverty, only for him to realize that it is not his parents' fault for the families' unfortunate situation. As Alexie describes "my parents came for poor people, who came from poor people, who came from poor people, all the way back to the first poor people" (Alexie 11). In this quote, Alexie explains that his parents aren't to blame for their unfortunate situation, and neither are his anosetror, but rather the people responsible for Alexie and his people's poverty is the ruling whether class that has oppressed them for hundreds of years. Alexie's ancestors were not born poor, but rather when the Europeans sailed over from Europe, they began to take advantage of the Native Americans, taking their land, resources, and future away from them. Krugman makes a similar point to Alexie's in his reading when he blames the ruling, wealthier class for the continued rate of poverty in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 101. Lesson Learned 3 : Inability Lesson learned 3: Inability to identify exact requirements and inability to control scope change Scope management begins at the beginning of a project. In the planning process group, two types of "Scope" need to be carefully defined: product scope and project scope. The product scope here would be the features and functions requirements of the e–Borders system. The project scope here should be how the work would be done including the deadline for the project completion. A scope baseline need to be approved with the project scope statement plan and work breakdown structure defined. After the scope baseline is formed, any change to the scope should be performed with a formal change control procedure. The e–Boarders project ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The detailed solution design was developed after Raytheon had been awarded the contract. "The Department had incorporated Raytheon's proposed design within the contract with the company. But the proposals had been based on too high–level requirements, leading to disputes after contract award over whether proposals would meet actual needs." [2]. Here, the high–level requirements could not serve the purpose of scopes which would state what was included and what was not. This is the fundamental cause of prolonged time span and overrun budget of this project. Because the Home office failed to objectively define detailed scopes, controlling of the scope became very difficult. "the Department has little clear idea of how it expects business processes to change." [2]. And the fact that the Home office has little knowledge of managing changes did not help. Proper change control procedure mentioned before had no signs of appearing throughout the project. However, because there was no scope baseline from the Department, requirements inevitably needed to be growing and shifting all the time. As the result of this, the Home office would think Raytheon's work unsuccessful, while Raytheon would find that it was the requirements change that hindered their processes. Therefore, the lesson learned here is that for a complex project, a well–developed, well–validated set of requirements is extremely important. Also, a proper change control procedure ensures ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 105. Pinned to the Wall: J. Alfred Prufrock and the Inability... Pinned to the Wall: J. Alfred Prufrock and the Inability to Change If people are disappointed with themselves and what they have become, then there are naturally two options for remedy. One is to do whatever possible to change themselves and pave a brighter future. The second, perhaps less desirable, is to realize that change is useless or near–impossible, which leads to either finding peace in the way things are or recognizing the hopelessness in the absence of the way things could be. T.S. Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" reaffirms the uselessness of change (FINISH). This reflective yet despairing poem is the lament of a man who, though he would like to muster up the courage to become something else, is trapped by an ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... If inner change is even possible in this poem at first glance, it is certainly thwarted by an environment that does not even seem to care at all that our narrator exists. Additionally, Prufrock is surrounded by a scene where impermanence reigns, where "women come and go talking of Michelangelo" and people seem less than eager to understand that time is of the essence. Prufrock longs to repeatedly convince himself that "there will be time" for anything he wishes to do, be it "murder and create" or "prepare a face to meet the faces that [he will] meet" (Eliot 27–28). However, he understands the precariousness of time, namely that it is a precious, finite resource that does not allow for an infinite number of modifications to one's own life. A "hundred...revisions" to Prufrock's lifestyle would not really matter if all of these are delicate enough such that "a minute will reverse" them anyway (Eliot 33, 48). Prufrock understands the grim underlying reality that there is not much time after all and implies this society in which he lives is drenched in its "empty fullness of its life" (Schneider 1104). In fact, the promise of time is a false consolation here, a "pathological insistence" by Prufrock to scrape up the seconds as they quickly fall through his fingers (Cahill 8). This reliance on time as a tool to change himself loses further validity in the face of Prufrock's impending ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 109. What Is Alzheimer's Disease (AD)? Alzheimers What is Alzheimers (AD)? Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a brain disorder which will slowly diminish memory and other vital functions of the brain over time. The brain cells slowly and continuously deteriorate, resulting in the weakening of memory and mental performance. Its major effect is the loss of intellect, grave enough to lose social skills and restrict day–to–day living. The disease progresses gradually and becomes more critical as time passes by. There is no known treatment to stop its development. Although being physically and mentally healthy may lessen the danger of AD, there are no known drugs that can diminish the threat. The rate at which AD progresses vary from person to person, but the average life prospect of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 113. generalist intervention model for the inability to focus This case is pertains to a 43 year old female named Elizabeth Slone; the client is having problems with maintaining structured thought processes. She believes that her Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and Attention Deficit Disorder are battling in her mind, so using the Generalist Intervention Model Elizabeth and I will manage everything from engagement to the follow–up, a structured technique of planned changes for addressing her tribulations. I am hoping to help her put together a plan, in turn put together a plan of action that can help label things and sort them out. Engagement The client entered my office this morning and proceeded to sit down in a chair in which I have place beside my desk, this is so that I may turn and have face ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Elizabeth is afraid of how the public such as the ones that she deals with on a regular basis will perceive her if they knew that she could not control her thoughts or emotions, especially since she has so much involvement with many volunteer projects. Psychological Issues My client began opening up about her childhood and has expressed to me that even though they were financially well off things were no better, emotionally it was a roller coaster. When she was young and was kept from seeing her father, there was continuous fighting between the two parents and this was usually over the children or the child support money. Even though there were other siblings and at one time they were close, but something changed which interfered with their opportunity to bond as siblings are suppose to. Thi is as far as I ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 117. A Separate Peace Gene And Finny Character Analysis The two protagonists' inability to reveal their inside feelings to each other plagues Gene and Finny throughout the novel A Separate Peace by John Knowles. Gene's jealousy and Finny's personality are main reasons why this conflict exists. Competition and rivalry theme Gene's paranoia and Finny's inability to accept the truth, which leads to tragedy. The competition within the friendship, Gene's inability to share his feelings with Finny, and Gene's paranoia are main factors in the development of the conflict that leads to Gene jouncing the limb. One example of Gene's paranoia is when Finny first forces Gene to jump off the tree, Gene ponders to himself, "Why did I let Finny talk me into stupid things like this? Was he getting some kind ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... There are multiple examples of Finny and Gene's inability to accept the truth of what happened at the tree. The first one is when Gene admits to Finny that he jounced the limb, but Finny refuses to accept it, calling Gene a "damn fool" (70), and ordering him to go away. This leads Gene to question himself whether he had actually deliberately caused Finny to fall. Gene contemplates, "Could it be that he might even be right? Had I really and definitely and knowingly done it to him after all" (70)? The final and most controversial example of their inability to accept the truth is when Finny can't stand the "investigation" of what happened happened at the tree. After a continued dialogue about what happened, Leper seems to know the truth. But before he is convinced to uncover the mystery, Phineas interrupts, proclaiming that, "[He doesn't] care" (176). Finny subsequently walks across the room and answers in an outburst to Brinker, "You get the rest of the facts, Brinker! You get all your facts! You collect every f–––ing fact there is in the world," then plunges out of the door only to fall down the marble steps, re–injure himself, and eventually die during the recovery surgery. Had Finny and Gene accepted the devastating truth between each other and in each of their minds, the story would conclude earlier and Finny would never have ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 121. Willy's Inability to Adapt to Modern Society in Death of a... Willy Loman is an old salesman (63 years old) who is no longer able to earn a living. He receives only a small commission as he ages, and he slowly loses his mind and attempts to kill himself by inhaling gas from the water heater or from crashing his Studebaker. Dave Singleman is his role model, he wants to become well liked and rich. He spends most of his time dreaming instead of doing anything to improve his life. He is obsessed with the post–war interpretation of the American Dream. In the end, he kills himself by crashing his car, hoping to get the life insurance money for his family. He is fervently determined to succeed in his contemporary competitive society. In a conversation with his children about Bernard, he enumerates a few ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... (Miller 86) It gets obvious that next to becoming successful, Willy also longs to be regarded by other people, he wants to be known and popular, he does not want to lead the life of a nobody. However, it is not enough for him to be liked; Willy wants to be "well liked". Charley realizes this strong need of Willy to be respected and liked by everybody, but when being asked why everybody has to like him; Willy knows no answer to this (Miller 104). In my eyes, Willy's need to be liked shows that he has many self–doubts. He does not want anybody to think that he might not be the successful salesperson he pretends to be. For that reason, he always longs for reassurance that other people – mostly people who have success, like Charley and Bernard – are not well liked either. (Miller 30, 33). To sum it up, Willy presumes "[...] a brash personality, a ready smile, a fast joke, and a glittering appearance – as the key to fame and fortune [...]" (Nelson 105). Does Willy fail because of society or does society let him fail? One of the reasons for Willy's failure is that he cannot adapt to modern society. He tends to compare the past with the present, he is not able to let go of the past and accept the present times and the changes that have taken place within the society. He repeats that things were better in the old days when "[...] old man Wagner was alive [...]" (Miller 10). At that time, the business world had still ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 125. Sheriff Court Case Study 1. The first ground was that he believed the senior judges had wrongly interpreted the meaning of the word "inability" found in section 12 (1) of the Sheriff Courts (Scotland) Act 1971. The appellant thought the meaning of "inability" was to be restricted to the narrow interpretation allowing the reasons behind unfitness for duty to be limited to physical or mental infirmity as oppose to the wider interpretation of including any form of incapability to perform the role of a judge. He believed that parliament never intended for "inability" to be widely interpreted as section 12 (1) of the 1971 act was intended to be read in relation to the historic legislative provisions for the removal of sheriffs from office in particular the Heritable Jurisdictions ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 129. How Does Phosphorus Cause Stunted Growth It is predicted that the removal of plant nutrients in general will result in stunted growth and death of the plant. If phosphurus is removed from a plant, effects will include stunted growth, An abnormal dark green colour, and a reddish–purple pigment excess amounts of sugars. Phosphorus is a component of the complex nucleic acid structure of plants, which regulates protein synthesis. Phosphorus is, therefore, important in cell division and development of new tissue. Phosphorus is also associated with complex energy transformations in the plant. This is why phosphurus deficiency in plants will cause stunted growth. Phosphurus deficent plants will have a dark green colour due to the fact that phosphurus deficiency causes excess biuildup of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 133. Amy Tan Mother Tongue Summary In "Mother Tongue," Amy Tan reflects on her experience with the controversy of the negative impact from faulty communication. She details the negative impact of faulty communication through conversations, meaningful relationships, and career opportunities. Tan describes the abundance of "Englishes" she grew up to know from her peers. Her mother's "English" stood out from the others because of her inability to communicate well. Most individuals considered Tan's mother's language "broken" or "limited" because of her faulty communication. Limited language proficiency negatively affects a person's quality of life. Limitations of a person's language affect their communication with other individuals. Therefore, the inability to speak with conciseness ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Tan describes her love towards the power of language and the abundance of "Englishes" she grew up to know. She begins to write fiction, but realizes her intention to master the English language fails. Once she realizes she writes for the wrong audiences, her envision changes: "Apart from what any critic had to say about my writing, I knew I had succeeded where it counted when my mother finished reading my book and gave me her verdict: 'So easy to read'" (Tan, p. 320). Tan thought her career involved writing fiction to intelligent audiences, but she struggles with communicating with them. Her inability to communicate to an intellectual audience affects the career opportunity for her, which results in her change in perspective of her intended audience. Additionally, Tan's mother loses independency when she cannot handle situations on her own. She emphasizes her mother's struggle to help herself as a result of her limitations of English. Tan describes, "When I was fifteen, she used to have me call people on the phone to pretend I was she" (Tan, p.318). Her mother did not receive respect from individuals because of the way she communicates with them; consequently, in order to receive respect, she utilizes her daughter's ability to communicate well. Tan's mother's limitations affect her opportunities of independency. As a result, a person's inability to communicate negatively affects their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 137. Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a generic, lethal... Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a generic, lethal condition characterized by an inability to will voluntary muscles as desired. The motor neurons responsible for exciting muscular contractions are deficient and loss of usage in voluntary muscles results in their atrophy. Characterized early in life, children with SMA exhibit difficulty in early voluntary muscular activities such as crawling, sucking, imitation of facial expressions, and breathing. Three stage of SMA exist: SMA I for children younger than six months, SMA II for children between 6–18 months of age, and SMA III for all remaining children. For many affected individuals, life expectancy depends upon the time in which symptoms began. The longer it takes for SMA ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Genetics of Spinal Muscular Atrophy In 1995 a French group of researchers discovered that SMA is autosomal recessive disorder due to loss of the survival motor neuron protein gene (SMN) (Lefebvre et al., 1995). Through experimentation the researchers discovered two copies of the SMN gene in chromosome five [chr 5q13.2]: telomeric and centromeric SMN copies. Experimentation proved that loss of the telomeric SMN (today known as SMN1) and not loss of its centromeric counterpart, SMN2, resulted in SMA. It took an additional six years for researchers to glimpse at the functions provided by SMN1. Meister et al. categorized the SMN1 protein an essential to promote correct assembly of U12 small ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs). In genetics, snRNPs are nucleic proteins responsible for the splicing of premature ribonucleic acid chains (pre–mRNA) derived from genes. Without correct splicing, mature ribonucleic acid chains (mRNAs) produce dysfunctional proteins when translated. In this case, splicing functionality of U12 – intron containing transcripts is lost, and because the transcript is wrongly coded, its translation will produce a functionless protein. Hence, loss of SMN1 results in an inability form U12 snRNPs splicing complexes, and reduced splicing functionality results in loss of U12 – intron splicing functionality (Patel and Steitz, 2003). Only recently (2012) did researchers ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 141. Nonsense Is Defined by Its Inability to be Defined Lewis... The definition of nonsense has been debated throughout literature. Yet nonsense itself cannot be defined, but rather it is defined by its inability to be defined. It's the destruction or defiance of the norm that often leads to creation of nonsense. The language of nonsense itself is closely intertwined with various techniques of style, structuralization and various motifs. Authors such as Lewis Caroll in Alice and Wonderland and Edward Lear's The Complete Nonsense of Edward Lear use such techniques to invoke the language of nonsense as well as to create nonsense within their writing. Both Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear use the language of nonsense is also defined by paradoxes, the play on stereotypes, and the usage of polysemy. Lewis ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In such a structure, Lear creates a paradox in that he uses various stereotypes of each individual that he chooses and breaks and defies that stereotype. In the creation of such limericks, Lear is specific in choosing adjectives; he uses places such as 'Portugal', 'Madras', etc. In such places there is an assumption of a stereotype of the individuals from those places, yet instead of creating that stereotype he creates nonsensical actions for those individuals. Both Carroll and Lear use polysemy throughout their nonsense. Polysemy can be defined as words or phrases having multiple meanings. Carroll uses polysemy in the fact that the creatures often take specific words for face value. For instance, the word mad has multiple meanings, it can either mean angry or crazed. Carroll is very careful to create 'the mad hatter' and the 'as mad as a March hare' as the same individual (Carroll). Yet it is in this matter that also fuels the nonsensical element has the 'mad hatter' becomes a paradox. Lear uses polysemy as well throughout his limericks. For instance, "There was an Old Person of Leeds/Whose head was infested with beads..."(Lear, 12). The word 'beads' could refer to the things that jewelry is made of or a reference to ones sanity (i.e. often called marbles in today's society). Such a play on words allow for the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 145. Holden’s Problem Is Not ‘Phonies’ but His Inability to... Holden's problem is not 'phonies' but his inability to accept reality." Do you agree? Holden Caulfield main problem is with all the phonies that surround him and irk him. Reading extensively through the novel; we can confirm that Holden throughout the book is continuously tormented by the acts of these phonies who are superficial and hypocritical. Throughout the novel Holden meets various phonies who commit phony acts. One such case is when he first arrived at the Edmont Hotel and he saw these couples squirting highballs water at each other. Another case is of him witnessing another phony act is when he goes on a date with Sally Hayes but they bump into one of Sally's phony friend, George. This part of the book really highlights ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Just before leaving he meets Lillian Simmons who is one of his brother D.B's, ex's. She tried striking up a conversation with Holden but the only reason why she talked to Holden is to find out how his brother was doing not in how Holden was doing himself. She even goes as far to ask Holden to pass on a message to his brother if he ever gets the chance. After she goes to leave, her date and Holden say that they were glad to have met each other, which was a phony thing to do as Holden wasn't glad at all to have met him. In a way though it would be safe to say that Holden is one of the biggest phonies in the book for example such as when he first arrives at the Edmont Hotel and sees a couple squirting water at each other faces. Though Holden says he is probably the most normal person in the hotel full of perverts he then does a phony act when he becomes of a hypocrite of what he just says and gets turned on by what he sees. He also goes as far to try and get lucky with Faith Cavendish. This is not the only time he goes back on his word when he does the same acts he accuses other people being phony for. Phoniness becomes a large theme in the novel and is one of Holden's biggest problems not only because of the people he meets but also because he is one of the biggest phonies in the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 149. Person Inabilities Definition Do Person's Inabilities Define Who They Are? Imagine going to sleep able to see, then waking up the next morning not being able to see. What would you do if the doctors told you that they did not know what happened or how to help you? Imagine you are on your way to the store and another car hits you and you are paralyzed. What would you if you woke up in the hospital and the doctors told you that you would never be able to walk again? Would you be able to go day by day wheeling yourself around? According to Rioiriri could you "easily find housing that is accessible to you, with no barriers to your mobility". Imagine you have a stroke and the doctors tell you that you will never be able to talk again, and that you had six months to live. Imagine one day out of nowhere, you can no longer hear anything. What would you do if some of your abilities became your inabilities? When I was four years old I heard my named and then a loud bump in the middle of the night. It was my mom who had fallen in the floor who was unresponsive when I got to her. I called 911, then ran next door which my little sister's Godmother lived and got her up. She came over and called my grandmother, while waiting on the ambulance. When we got to the hospital the doctor said that my mom had a stroke. I did not know it at the time but they gave her six months to live. They told her ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This may be great way of communication but the problem is very few people know sign language. Why do we not as an environment not push ourselves and our children to learn sign language just like we learn any other language? Since there are not as many people that do not know sign language there is a language barrier. When there is any kind of barrier between people you many have some misunderstanding. This is where you will have those people tease or walk all over people because of their inabilities to do ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 153. What Is Achebe's Inability To Understand Conrad? Achebe's Inability to Understand Conrad's Heart of Darkness A fierce Achebe radically condemns Conrad as "a thoroughgoing racist" in his article, arguing that Heart of Darkness is not a piece of great literature, but "an offensive and deplorable book" (Achebe 1791). He structures his argument around a few central ideas, such as the grotesque perception of the Africans by the protagonist, the antinomy between the Thames and Congo River, the lack of historical fact, and the parallel between the African and the European women, among others. Achebe misinterprets Conrad's work, and exhibits opacity to the narrative's message. He seems to purport, as any reader, a subjective interpretative reading of Conrad's book, with the peculiarity ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The reader has another type of anxiety than the one mentioned by Achebe: s/he anxiously waits to see if any truly significant contact with Africa, its people, or its culture occurs throughout the book. Instead, the phrase "Nowhere did we stop long enough to get a particularized impression," is emblematic, and indicative that this contact does not, and probably will not happen (Conrad 19). Conrad assumes no task of presenting a good, objective or factual image of Africa, as Achebe would prefer; instead he critically exposes a refraction of this image in the European white middle class tainted perception. Indeed, many "normal readers," whom Achebe credits to be "well armed to detect and resist" underhand activity from the part of a writer, read into the novel its universal psychological implications that override Africanness or Europeanness. Marlow remains insulated from any real contact with the local culture; his stuck–to–the–river journey serves to preserve a confused and contemplative attitude in him, rather than an involved state of mind. His African experience comprises very little fact, proves mostly sensorial, observant and rather interested in itself as an object of study than in the surroundings. Describing the Other's eyes or looking into them serves just as a mirror. Legend has it that Narcissus contemplated his beauty in the lake daily, and ended up drowning in it. After his death, jealous nymphs came and whined to the lake, his closest ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...