Measure of a Genius Genius is a word which has different meanings. A genius is a person who has natural ability to use a higher mental capacity in uniquely creative or inventive ways. This ability is said to be given by Gods‚ which enable a person with the gifts to think abstractly. A genius conceptualizes ideas on a deeper level than that of an average thinker‚ giving him or her means to formulate ideas or solutions to problems that would otherwise be overlooked. In Burro Genius‚ written by the
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Many awards have been established to recognize and commemorate people‚ places‚ or events that have made a considerable difference in our society. Awards such as the Nobel Peace Prize or the military’s Purple Heart‚ are wildly known and are considered to be a tremendous honor. However‚ there is an award that holds a similar amount of prestige‚ but not in the same manner. The John Newberry Award is an annual recognition given to the authors of outstanding children literature by the American Library
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The definition of a nonconformist is a person who does not conform to a generally accepted pattern of thought or action. Salvador Dali was born on May 11‚ 1904‚ in Catalonia‚ Spain. He influenced and was influenced by many artists such as Pablo Picasso and Andre Breton. After many trials‚ but an overall successful career‚ Salvador Dali died on January 23‚ 1989‚ from heart disease and pneumonia. Dali is a prime example of nonconformity because of the originality in his art‚ his outward style and appearance
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Born and raised in Brooklyn‚ New York Robert M. Solow came into the world on August twenty third‚ nineteen twenty-four. Although Solow and his family weren’t the most fortunate and had to earn a living after they finished high school‚ his sisters and cousins were the first generation of the family to go off and attend college including Robert M. Solow himself. Robert Solow skipped a few grades in elementary‚ graduated at the age of sixteen and got a scholarship to Harvard University which he had
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Albert Einstein‚ in an Address in Chicago observed: “The existence and validity of human rights are not written in the stars. The ideals concerning the conduct of men towards each other and the desirable structure of the community have been conceived and taught by enlightened individuals in the course of history. Those ideals and convictions which resulted from historical experience‚ from the craving for beauty and harmony‚ have been readily accepted in theory by man - and at all times‚ have been
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“Speer was an apolitical technocrat” There have been historical arguments over the idea of Albert Speer being an apolitical technocrat in regards to his career. Speer wasn’t an apolitical technocrat due to the use of slave labour for the production of armament‚ his visits to concentration camps such as Mauthausen camp and the horrific conditions he saw at the Dora missile factory‚ his knowledge of Himmler’s speech at Posen also his defence at the Nuremburg trials in 1945. Criticism of Speer’s
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In the novel The Stranger by Albert Camus‚ the protagonist Meursault is a man who is indifferent to major events in his life which would deserve a "proper" reaction according to society. Also‚ the decisions he makes in his life are done carelessly and without a second thought about whether what he is doing is good or bad. As a result‚ Meursault is a stranger to society because of how differently his view on life is based on how he approaches certain aspects of life. Eventually‚ death is what connects
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I. Camus’ Life. A. The point of philosophy is life: “The preceding merely defines a way of thinking. But the point is to live.” (The Myth of Sisyphus) B. Camus’ life and work were dominated by the juxtaposition of an indomitable will towards happiness and justice on one hand and the indifference and hostility of the world on the other hand. This juxtaposition constitutes the absurd. II. Camus’ Work. Most of Camus’ work is a development of the themes dealt with in The Myth
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THE STRANGER "What is it‚ indeed‚ the absurd man? The one who‚ without denying it‚ does not make anything for the eternal. It is not that the nostalgia is strange to him‚ but rather he prefers his anger and his reasoning. The first one teaches him to live without appeal and to be satisfied with what he has; the second teaches his limits. Sure of his freedom to term‚ of his rebellion without future and of his perishable conscience‚ his adventure continues in the time of its life. The field is
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Albert Jacka Albert Jacka was born on the 10th of January 1893 in a small dairy farm in Winchelsea‚ Victoria. On the 17th of the first 1932‚ seven days after his 39th birthday‚ he died of chronic nephritis. He was the fourth child of 7 of Nathaniel Jacka and Mary Elizabeth Kettle. He spent most of his life in Wedderburn after his parents decided to move the family there in 1898 when Bertie was the age of 5. After completing elementary school‚ he found work as a labourer with his father‚ and
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