Assume that win=2 draw=1 and lose=0. If the supremacy matrix is calculated, tie always occurs, which proves that if there is a small gap between win and draws, that supremacy matrix isn’t valid.…
Once again Berry’s Bug Blasters are requesting an update to the previous program that was designed to help them to better serve their customers. The company has requested a way to display the name and phone number of their clients so that they can keep a record of what clients have called. The best way in the opinion to accomplish this is to build an array into the program. This will allow those in charge of the company record to record who has called and then to display the names of the clients and their number in a chart so that it can be recalled at a later date as needed.…
The movie "The Matrix" is a giant reference to Plato's myth, with the Matrix as the cave, and Neo being an escapee. Neo's first words outside of the Matrix are "My eyes…
Let us examine the following condition of complete observations given above. Assume that $\Upsilon_{\chi}$ is taken as distribution function whose total failure times is studied using gamma distribution applied to the shape parameters $3$ together with scale parameters $2.$ On side of repair time it goes with the same way failure time with gamma distribution together with shape parameter $1,$ and scale parameter $2$ respectively. The time $\tau$ is examined as the following $\tau=2.5,\tau=5,$ and $\tau=7.5$ for getting a good approximation. For precise value to $\Lambda_{a}(\tau)$ at given time $\tau$ is examined by applying Mathematica. The given $(n)$ indicated in table$(2)$ is the observations number to the operating with repair times, $\widehat{\overline{\Lambda}}_{a}(\tau)$ indicates also the average to $\widehat{\Lambda}_{a}(\tau)$ more than $100$ times repetitions at time $\tau$, where $\widehat{\overline{\theta}}(\tau)$ indicates the mean of sample to estimate the standard error to the estimation where $\Lambda_{a,\rho}$ and $\Lambda_{a,Q}$ indicates $100\%$ upper and lower to the limit of confidence interval to $\Lambda_{a}(\tau)$.\\…
Eventually, you will have a choice to make; a choice that will define: “How to survive life in, The Matrix?” In ‘The Matrix’ nothing is real however, your mind has been conditioned to believe it is real! The Matrix is far too big to defeat; no one can escape it, and we haven’t the means or intelligence to beat those in control! Through my research, I discovered that America is a society of functional illiterates!…
The two texts that include The Matrix and Plato’s Allegory of the Cave both have similar ideas in the way that they both show how everyone has a different idea on what reality is. Plato’s Allegory of the Cave shows a cave where people have been kept since birth. The people are tied up in a way which has them only able to see the shadows in front of them and nothing else either side or behind them. The reality for these people that are tied up is just the shadows of all different things that are walking along behind them including people and animals. When one of the prisoners escapes his bonds he goes out and sees the real world for what it truly is and this person goes back to try to tell the other prisoners. The other prisoners just see the escaped prisoner as a shadow with a voice that they can’t understand. The Matrix is very similar because Neo the main character starts out living in a fake reality of the real world and then gets shown what the actual reality is.…
|4. |A survey indicated that 3 out of 5 doctors use | |1200 | |…
The movie Matrix can be considered a modern allegory of the allegory of the cave. Like the people in the cave, humans, trapped in the Matrix, see only what the machines want them to see. They are deceived into believing that what they hear and see is the only reality that exists, and accept the illusions of their senses as the only part of truth. But Neo, the main character, is forced to face the painful truth, when he is pulled out of the capsule that kept him prisoner of the virtual reality of the Matrix. Neo suddenly discovers that what was before his life, were only shadows, reflections of…
Focusing specifically on The Allegory of the Cave and The Matrix, there are many similarities between the questionable perceptions described in each story. In The Allegory of the Cave, Socrates paints a picture of a group of prisoners that have been confined to a dark…
Comparing and contrasting the synopsis “The Matrix” to Plato's “The Allegory Of The Cave” and also Descartes “Meditation I Of The Things Of Which We May Doubt” which have several similarities and also some differences. In all three of these stories the main idea is that reality is in question. In the Matrix, the human being is in a pod like machine that is controlled by a computer simulating what we think and know to be reality. Reality is not only created but manipulated to deceive what is truly surrounding you, when you are clearly in a pod unaware of what reality really is. In Plato's “The Allegory of the Cave” this also focuses on two different realities based on what is in fact real and what is perceived. Plato's view on the prisoners being fooled into a false reality by placing fake objects around them to trick their perception of reality and also put them in a one track state of mind, while life goes on outside of where they are captive. This is similar to The Matrix because in both stories the people are being manipulated to believe a reality outside of what is truly happening at the present time. In both stories, the person that has been captive for a certain period of time but then is able to experience reality outside of just manipulated perception has doubts, they are in disbelief of what they are actually able to witness for the first time. Reality, not perception but what is truly real happening and not being simulated or manipulated so that you would be fooled into believing something that is not real. In the Matrix, Neo lived a pretty normal life as an everyday human being but could not sleep well and like Plato stated that the prisoner would have to sense something, get some kind of feeling that something just was not quite right about his surroundings and the way they were existing. Another similarity is that the prisoners and pods were being manipulated to believe a false reality by people above them.…
In this movie, we are introduced to a world in which machines had imprisoned man into a virtual world called “the matrix”. There the main protagonist “Neo” founds himself living in this world in questioning whether is real or not, and manages to scape with the help of a group of survivors from the real world. Yet the real world was not what he expected, earth was devastated by a long war between man and machines, and what is left of humanity lives in an underground city were the sewers of the old world use to be. We can consider the Matrix to be the cave, and the shadows projected by the fire, it also presents two possible outcomes from finding true knowledge. In the allegory, Plato believes that if an individual manages to escape from the cave it could end up in two ways. The first way indicates that if a man manages to escape the cave, he would be overwhelmed by the light, and the actual shapes of the shadows he saw, “Don’t you think he would be puzzled, and believe what he saw before was truer than what was shown to him?”(Plato pg2) indicating that the individual who got out would have trouble believing the things from outside the cave would be real. In the movie Neo faces the same problem when he is liberated from the matrix believing that the real world was actually a dream. The second way this could end up is if the individual finds himself to overwhelm by the real world to the point that…
Manlove, J., Ryan, S., Wildsmith, E., & Franzetta, K. (2010). The relationship context of nonmarital childbearing in the U.S. Demographic Research 23 (22), 615-654…
| Lewin’s Field Theory is based upon the premise of organizational change. Using a three stage process of change Unfreeze, Move, and Refreeze. When implementing change, Lewin insisted that –“what does not work is telling people they need to change.” Instead change is based upon behaviors which are a person’s interactions within a group or environment or context within an organization. Lewin’s formula {B = f (P, E)}, where B = behavior is a function of a person’s (P) interactions within the environment (E), also known as context explains the unique relationship between a person and their interaction within the environment. This theory state in order to motivate individuals to change you must create dissatisfaction; breaking “social habits” or group norm start with creating a sense disequilibrium and discomfort, for the individual. This is known as Unfreezing or changing old habits. Moving or creating new methods of operating is most effective when done in a group setting and is based upon the idea – people normally do not resist change, but resist how change is implemented. Refreezing is where management reinforces newly group established…
In “The Allegory of the Cave,” Plato embodied a metaphor that compares the way in which we see and believe is actual reality. He creates a cave where prisoners are chained down and are forced to stare at the dark wall in front of them. They are sheltered from any light. You can also perceive this in a different sense, for example all that they see in the world is darkness and that they do not know the difference between what is real and what they consider as “real.” “Like ourselves, I replied; and they see only their own shadows or the shadows of one another, which the fire throws on the opposite wall of…
What if the world everyone perceives as a reality is only an elaborate deception? Human beings believe they are living in realities because they do not know of anything else. What they feel, see, hear, taste, and feel all contribute to their subconscious belief of physical existence. As people dream, however, they usually cannot recognize that they are not living through the events—that is, until they wake up. What if they do not wake up? How would they know the difference between their false perceptions and reality? The Ancient Greek philosopher Plato explores this concept within an example he uses in his work The Republic. In his example, known as the “Allegory of the Cave”, Plato uses an allegorical cave to show how humans are uncomfortable when exposed to the truth and that they are manipulated by higher authorities. In their 1999 motion picture The Matrix, the Wachowski brothers use a computer program to display similar ideals of Plato's allegory, including how humans are controlled and negatively react to the truth. Plato's “Allegory of the Cave” serves as a philosophical basis to The Matrix, as both works suggest that humans express discomfort while exposed to truth and both argue that people are controlled by higher authorities.…