In the early morning, there was a hit-and run accident that left the driver dead, and his girlfriend in a coma. I need to figure out if this was an accident and if there was alcohol involoved in the crash. There are 3 possible suspects, and with the evidence I have, I need to figure out which one of the 3 - the teammate, exgirlfriend, and housekeeper - killed Cody.…
Silas Deane was a man of promise, he came from humble origins, but he rose to great heights. However, he did fall from respect, and lived out his life thought to be a traitor and a cheat. He died in an unusual manner, however. On the deck of the ship that would bring him back to America for the first time in over a decade, he fell extremely ill and died. Silas Deane was murdered by a certain Dr. Bancroft. This is not definite by any means, but it is the most probable cause of his death. The murder of Silas Deane protected Bancroft, and so shows the motive of the murderer, and his circumstances show his ability to perform the act.…
Research Article: Sklaroff, S., Miron, M., Fields, H., & Marek, A. C. (2005). HORROR IN RED LAKE. U.S. News & World Report, 138(12), 28-29.…
About 23.5 million Americans are addicted to alcohol and drugs. That's approximately one in every 10 Americans over the age of 12. In the book "The Other Wes Moore" by Wes Moore, Wes Moore writes about this life growing up without a father and moving around. Wes Moore also talks about how there was another person that has the exact same name as him and how scary it would of been if they ended up getting each others lives. In the book, The "Other Wes Moore" by Wes Moore, the author explores the ideas of family guilt and education to develop the theme The people one surround himself/herself with will have an effect on his/her…
In this paper I intend to explain what the Divine Command Theory means according to Emil Brunner and how Kai Nielsen objects to that theory. I plan to do this by an explanation of what Divine Command Theory is as opposed to Humanistic Ethics. I plan to show that abandoning religious ethics in support of Humanistic Ethics is not reasonable.…
The city of Woburn sits in Middlesex County and it's no exaggeration to say that it embodies a lot of what is so attractive about the county. The old-fashioned architecture and the temperate climate are welcoming aspects to the feel of the place, and a walk along the banks of Horn Pond will put you in mind of a certain kind of sleepy, relaxing town that is perfect for a no-fuss holiday. Check out these Hotels & Airbnb Vacation Rentals In Woburn, Massachusetts, a selection of accommodations that represent well what the city is about. One word of warning - while the summer and spring here is famously temperate, the mercury drops sharply from November onwards and can become…
Jeff Weise was a 15-year old boy, who on Monday, March 21, 2005 shot 9 people, including his grandfather, his grandfather’s girlfriend, a school teacher, a security guard and five of his fellow students, at Red Lake Senior High School, Minnesota, with a .22-caliber gun.…
When you’re walking down the street and see the kids out and about, what are some things that you see that can affect their behavior or even their future possibly? The things that go on in today’s society have played a major role in how this generation, along with others turn out. An individual being raised in a single-parent home, in an immoral community, or maybe even losing someone that meant everything to them can affect their lives in ways that can either send them down the right or wrong road. Also, a person’s choices or decision-making skills can affect their life in a major way. “Your choices will determine your future” was always something I was told as a youth. When reading The Other Wes Moore these problems…
At the beginning of this section, Stuever talks mainly about the artificial side of Christmas, about how everything can be “better”, which is talked about repeatedly on page 306. “They suggest the lakeside lights… villages and quain sounding burgs in Minnesota and Vermont.(306)” “... people waiting in line to see one Santa tell me about Santas who are better (more beloved)... People point me to “better” people, too, by which they mean people having nobler, more storybook Noels…(306)” All around him there is unhappiness or dissatisfaction with what people currently have. He can find nothing else except people seeking for something “better” to fill their shallow hearts, and when that isn't enough, they move on again. Then, Stuever drops one tiny little bomb meant to touch our hearts on what Christmas is really about: the children.…
The problem of evil is a significant and enduring philosophical and theological debate. A question is often raised and discussed: if God is both all-loving and all-powerful, then how can evils-including natural evil and moral evil---exist in our world? In response to the charge that the evils of the world are incompatible with God's omnipotence and perfect goodness, the word"theodicy" is coined to deal with the problem of evil. Usually it is an attempt to show that it is possible to affirm the omnipotence of God, the love of God, and the reality of evil without contradiction. Two of the most well-known and most frequently discussed theodicies are the Augustinian theodicy and the Irenaean theodicy.…
Some theists of the Abrahamic persuasion claim that the harmony of the universe is proof of an intelligent designer. This argument is known as the teleological argument and has evolved from classical philosophy to modern theology. In addition, subscribers of the Abrahamic religions also hold that God has attributes that include omniscience, omnipotence, and benevolence. Fundamentally, God is all knowing, all-powerful, and all good. In contrast, God created a perfect universe that is in harmony, but occasionally practices miracles. Can the teleological argument, miracles, and God’s attributes coexist in a rational universe? This essay’s goal is…
In fact McCloskey places the bar even lower by referring to the “proofs of” rather than “arguments for” God’s existence, thereby overstating the Theist’s claim. With respect to the “proofs” for God’s existence that McCloskey attempts to deal with, namely the Cosmological and Teleological Arguments, McCloskey offers trivial objections that are easily answered. With respect to arguments for God’s non-existence, McCloskey offers the logical form of the problem of evil which, while rich in rhetoric, does not contain enough logic to necessitate its title. McCloskey ends his article with a pragmatic justification of Atheist, stating that Atheism is more comforting that Theism; a point that is stark in its irrelevance.…
“This idea that we’re now divided is being manufactured and spread by the media,” said Trump supporter Loy Brunson, 60, a musician in Provo, Utah.…
First I will discuss ‘divine command theory’, one horn of the dilemma (2). Next, I will talk about the other horn, which includes all theories about ethics (or meta-ethics) that aren’t related to God’s will (1). After examining the weaknesses of each option, I will consider – and argue against - the alternative options presented by theists. Finally, I will state the reasons why the arguments for divine command theory aren’t strong enough, and why (1) is the most sensible option to choose.…
For early modern Christian theologians, the nature of god was more or less a settled question. There were, it is true, disputes along the margins. The synod of dort, convened in 1618 and 1619 to resolve debates between Calvinists and the arminian remonstrants, crystallized ongoing skirmishes over the proper understanding of divine foreknowledge and will. decades later, arminianism was just one of John Milton’s unorthodoxies, and one of his less eccentric ones; more unusual was his rejection, in his mature theology, of the doctrine of the Trinity.1 still, even at his most heretical, Milton could agree with nearly all reformed thinkers when it came to god’s essential attributes—immensity, infinity, eternality, immutability, omnipresence, omnipotence, omniscience, oneness—and his departures from orthodoxy generally begin from this common ground.2 but if the question “What is god?” had a sufficient answer in theory, thinking about god in more practical terms (How does he do things?) proved less satisfying. Perhaps it still does. Take immutability: what can it mean in practice to be unchanging? How, to pursue just one potential problem, does an immutable being act? We may decide that acting entails process, and that process implies change, and if we do so the answer begins to seem elusive. one can make certain claims about god, but transforming those claims into plausible accounts of how it all actually works turns out to be more difficult. Problems like this one weigh heavily on the preface to Joseph Fletcher’s 1628 religious narrative the Historie of the Perfect-CursedBlessed Man, which unfolds as a theological treatise in miniature, mounted to explain and defend the poetry that will follow. its fourteen pages cover a number of topics, with special attention going to the Fall and redemption, but their point of departure is a discussion of the infinite, eternal god and his relationship to our finite, temporal world:…