The Relevance and Significance of Leviathan in Contemporary Democracy __________________________________________ In Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree Bachelor of Arts Major in Classical Philosophy _____________________________________________ By Sem. Leo Jay D.R. Salvatierra 2013 Chapter 1 Introduction Background of the study If not democracy then what? “… A believer in democracy knows that every person has within him some sort
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Colors around us. Our environment‚ culture and upbringing conditions us to associate different colors with particular things. For example‚ purple brings to mind royalty‚ wealth and perhaps wisdom and religion; red we associate with danger or as a warning; pink is the color of love and romance; white is purity‚ cleanliness and sterility and so on. Color is actually light‚ carried from the sun in waves and is part of the same electro-magnetic spectrum as x-rays‚ radio waves and the like. Light
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Hemingway’s observation of Paris is really subjective in that he writes about Paris the way he personally felt. Hemingway gives emotion to his environment and describes the weather or café according to his own mood. When he describes his good friend Sylvia Beach‚ his personality becomes vivid and describes Beach’s bookstore as a place of safe haven and warmth. In contrast on the way back from the racetrack at Prunier’s everything is described as dark or in relation
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classroom atmosphere and how to establish a sustainable‚ positive atmosphere in your classroom Table of Contents 1. Introduction 2 2. Learner Motivation 2 2.1. Extrinsic Versus Intrinsic Motivation 4 3. Communication 5 4. Interpersonal relations between learners and the facilitator 6 5. The maintenance of discipline 6 6. Classroom discipline policy 8 7. Conclusion 9 8. References 9 Introduction The benefits of creating a positive learning atmosphere in a classroom
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Mood is the overall feeling of the poem. This poem fluctuates but for the majority of the of it‚ the mood of darkness and evil seems to catch your eye. in line eighteen the darkness falls back over. Setting is also used in this poem to make connection to an object‚ in this case a creature. Setting is the
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the house‚ "Dark draperies hung upon the walls. The general furniture was profuse‚ comfortless‚ antique‚ and tattered. Many books and musical instruments lay scattered about but failed to give any vitality to the scene. I felt that I breathed an atmosphere of sorrow. An air of stern‚ deep‚ and irredeemable gloom hung over and pervaded all." In this passage‚ he uses gloom a second time to describe the room as well as sorrow‚ dark and tattered all these words give the description a darker and more depressing
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Madelyn Fontenot English III Vara March 29‚ 2013 Mood of obsession: Use of literary devices to enhance the mood of “Berenice” Famous author and poet Edgar Allan Poe is well known for his writing of ill-minded scenarios and grotesque circumstances. Poe‚ one of America’s most ailing writers‚ made use of many different literary devices to develop his popular‚ eerie‚ and suspenseful mood. In “Berenice” (1835)‚ Edgar Allan Poe creates a perturbed mood to uniquely describe love‚ life‚ and death through
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Analyse how Charlotte Perkins Gilman creates an unsettling atmosphere in The Yellow Wallpaper and discuss any wider issues the novella confronts. Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s story‚ The Yellow Wallpaper‚ is an enigmatic representation of a female hero overcoming the repression of being branded insane. Gilman’s use of a woman’s mental illness to portray for the reader how women were viewed and their rights distinguished during the time it is set and how her moments with the wallpaper define all of
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Furthermore‚ Ira C. Herbert’s letter establishes a serious mood. For example‚ he justifies that‚ “... We are writing to ask you to stop using this theme or slogan in connection with the book” which is informing that the The Grove Press must stop using “their” slogan(6-7). Herbert implants a serious mood in the reader when he decides to not use any positive words and just gets to the main point of his letter. Another example would be him claiming that in 1952‚ Coca-Cola used “There’s this about Coke-You
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cold’; ‘not a mouse stirring’ creating an eerie and silent atmosphere. One guard‚ Francisco‚ questions the arrival of new characters with a feeling of paranoia and anxiety: ’stand and unfold yourself’; ‘stand ho! Who is there?’ presumably his vision marred by a dense fog‚ this heightening the gothic setting. However‚ this also make the audience eager to understand the apprehensiveness of Francisco‚ as they’ve been immersed into an atmosphere of uneasiness and uncertainty‚ this feeling is also evident
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