Introduction: Elodea is a species of aquatic plant often called waterweed. Like other plants, Elodea absorbs carbon dioxide and releases oxygen during photosynthesis.…
Looking at the graphs on population and troops, why do you think Union states were able to raise a much larger army than the Confederacy?…
Whether attending college or participating at a seminar one will inevitably run into lectures. Whether you consider lectures boring or not a question that may have come to mind is if the time listening to that lecture is worth the time spent. Perhaps on that same note, you have thought that there are better ways of receiving instruction on the same topics. Have lectures become obsolete, or is there still value in this age-old form of teaching.…
The human mind is difficult to understand as every human possesses his/her own individual thought rituals at different levels of complexities. From a psychological approach the point(s) to get across are to reveal the revelation of its author’s mind and personality. In other words, how the literature is linked with the author’s mental and emotional characteristics. Today, psychology has been introduced in most everything. Before the field of Psychology was introduced an American author, Edgar Allan Poe, was deeply aware of the complexities of the human mind and its effects on behavior. His comprehension of the human brain is embedded in short stories such as, “The Black Cat” and “The Cask of Amontillado.” Edgar Allan Poe presents protagonists…
In Henry David Thoreau’s “Where I Lived, and What I Lived For,” (1854) the main thing Thoreau is trying to get across is simplicity, he is even goes as far as moving out to a rural area of Walden Pond for two years just to get away from the city and all the fast moving life. Thoreau uses three different rhetorical strategies to talk about life, his use of similes talks about a life with no purpose, he uses rhetorical questioning to make people think the way he does, and the use of repetition is to get the point across of a simple life.…
This analytical article is based on the work of Mike Rose and Maya Angelou. The main theme of this essay hovers around the two of the works –“I Just Want to Be Average” and “Graduation” - by Mike Rose and Maya Angelou. Furthermore, a general description of this essay and the relationship between the both is the discussion of this essay. However, this is done with an analysis of the complimentary effect of one on another and ultimately how both of these works make the whole image pertaining to the life of a type school student.…
The essay “Does the Internet Make You Smarter?” talks about how the internet has evolved from classic print and how it affects people in today’s society. The author talks about what people have the capability to create using the internet and electronics. The author also talks about the mediocre things that are being published on the internet. Throughout the essay the author talks about the issues that society came upon when the first printing press was created and how it is similar to what we are encountering today. Going along in this essay the author brings up how there are things that get released that can help people of today and there are also things created that aren’t as beneficial to society. He goes on to say that what is created that can benefit us takes much longer for the widespread of it than the time it takes for the widespread of something less important.…
Based on your understanding of the situation, answer the following questions: How do people in “individualist’ cultures behave differently to people in “collectivist” cultures?…
Man has always, from one time to another, sought the knowledge of power which he cannot comprehend. Engrossed in such thoughts makes one mad with obssession. For both Willy Lowman from Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller and Frankesntein from Mary Shelley's similarily titled book; they know this well. Willy and Frankensteinare two men under the spell of their megolomaniacal delusions of grandeur that compel them to reach for what they cannot have - new life.…
“When May I Shoot a Student” by Greg Hampikian is a satirical essay criticizing the allowance of guns on college campuses in Idaho, in response to the passing of a bill proposing the idea. Written on February 27, 2014, from Boise, Idaho, this essay is written to the Idaho state legislature, and directed at an audience of adults and young adults who may share his opinion.…
When one begins college, they may experience a whole new type of pressure that they have never felt before. One may feel the need to produce absolutely perfect work on all given assignments. This has become a new reality for college students that want to have a perfect score on every assignment, how much extra work they have done to improve their grades, and how many hours they have spent in the library just trying to get ahead. With college tuition going up each year, many students want to perform their best which could lead to better jobs and opportunities which can then help pay college debt. This is the new pressure that students are putting on themselves each and every day and many are afraid of falling behind in their work and will not…
Human dreams of achievement, recognition, wealth and the pursuit of happiness often bring misery, rejection, irresponsibility, unethical choices and sometimes death. Attempting to fulfill those dreams can bring arrogance that blinds our vision to reality and the choices made eliminate right and wrong from our hearts or minds. In Frankenstein, the monster learns to be human by reading, _The Sorrows of Young Werther_, written by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. "Must it ever be thus, -- that the source of our happiness must also be the fountain of our misery?" (von Goethe, Book I, August 18). Frankenstein went beyond the boundaries of science…
In the video, A Class Divided, a third grade teacher, Jane Elliot, used eye colors to separate her class in an attempt to make them feel the way people of color feel when they are discriminated against. In the exercise all children with blue eyes were considered smarter, more fortunate, and over-all better people than the children with brown eyes. During recess, only the children with blue eyes were allowed to go on the playground equipment, and brown eyed children weren’t allowed to talk to the blue eyed children. At the end of the day the class took a test, and it turned out that the blue eyed children got better test scores. Also, many of the brown eyed children were upset, and one boy with brown eyes even punched one of his friends for…
In the “Adventure of a German Student”, Wolfgang’s downfall is ultimately caused by himself. This is due to his own actions which led to his illness and then his demise. The reader can infer that once Wolfgang lived a “secluded life” (Irving 2), he will be ill. This loneliness caused Wolfgang to see visions in his head, this will be a detrimental later in the story for him. Wolfgang’s loneliness ultimately made him have visions in real life also. Before Wolfgang met up with the strange woman, he saw her face in one of his vision. While this may seem like the work of satan; it is not. The author stated that Wolfgang’s imagination is “diseased” (Irving 2) which imply Wolfgang is losing his mind. Everything that happens thereafter is the fault…
Evil resides in all human beings. It excites. It compels. Most people try and ignore their feelings of evil and hide them. At best people keep their evil thoughts to themselves. Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein explores evil by having the protagonist create a monstrous alter-ego. This ultimately shows that if people do not keep the evil side of themselves in control then they will fall victim to it. Delving into Frankenstein I will be looking at the approach Shelley took in showing the evil side of her main character and how that evil is not another being but in fact her characters alter ego.…