"Doc Scurlock" Essays and Research Papers

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    with the Puritan doctrine‚ children were seen as naturally evil beings (Doc 1). Proper and pious parents were responsible for instilling virtues and morals into their organically pagan children. However‚ the Stuart-run religious beliefs of the 17th century and the Anglican Church brought about a new and differing view of children. Offspring were effectively blank-slates and‚ left to their own devices‚ happy and benevolent (Doc 2‚ 3). The new society placed more blame on nurture‚ rather that nature

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    my most favorite is Doc. Personally because I always was willing to have an older friend of mine who understood life well and could teach me how to get through circumstances that makes me feel uncertain and not sure on how should I proceed. Despite the fact that Doc‚ an old alcoholic German music instructor‚ speaks to the universe of rationale and reasonability‚ he comprehends the mysterious side of life in the meantime. In Chapter Nineteen Peekay condenses his character: "Doc was quiet and reason

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    Dbq on Prohibition

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    centered in areas with 2‚500 to 99‚000 people. This meant that it was not in great cities nor in rural areas that prohibition was most popular (Doc. K). A great deal of prohibition movement was concentrated in the church and in female voters. The prohibitionists appealed to women voters. One source said‚ "Truly does a saloon make a woman bare of all things!" (Doc. A). And in Document B there is a poster that appeals to women through their children‚ claiming that alcohol in fathers causes defective children

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    economy that deemed hard to control (doc 1). It was so large that people lost hope in their own civilization‚ doomed to wallow in the empire’s downfall. The majority of the population were farmers (doc 1) who themselves could not support their own farms which then could not support the economic needs of the empire. As the growth of slaves increased‚ a large amount of latifundias soon surfaced. These great estates led the already suffering farmers to the city (doc 4) where their presence only increased

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    While there were many positive reactions to the spread of Buddhism‚ such as Zong Mi‚ A Buddhist scholar‚ discussing the perfect society created Buddhism‚ there were also many negative responses (Doc. 5). Han Yu‚ for example‚ was a Confucian scholar who believed Buddhism would weaken the government (Doc. 4). As Buddhism spread‚ many scholars and government officials had positive comments. Chinese scholar‚ Zhi Dun speaks in favor of Buddhism when discussing Nirvana and the steps one must take to

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    Dbq: the Black Plague

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    scientific explanation blaming uncleanliness for the plague (Doc 2). The plague was carried around by rats which contributed to the dispersion of the bacillus. The areas that were the most susceptible to the plague where those with the most famine. In 1571 Heinrich von Staden‚ count of the Palestine‚ observed some of the cardinal consequences of the plague such as roads being guarded so that infected people didn’t move from the infected area (Doc 5). The closing of roads led to a disruption in trade throughout

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    Jefferson vs Hamilton Dbq

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     Jefferson believed the bank was unconstitutional due to his strict interpretation of the Constitution.(Doc A) Although he believed a bank was overstepping the constitutional boundaries and advocated against it‚ Jefferson did not destroy it during his presidency. Hamilton thought a Bank of the United States was constitutional due to his loose interpretation of the Constitution due to the Necessary and Proper Clause.(Doc B) Jefferson disagreed with Hamilton stating that all powers not declared in the constitution were delegated to the states

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    Cotton Industry

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    year they work in Japanese textile factories (Doc 3). As a Buddhist priest from a rural region of Japan‚ he has seen girls leaving for factories to earn some money to support the peasants’. Girls earnings from the factories were helpful to the poor peasants because they earned more than a farmer’s income ( Doc 4). Tsurumi as a Japanese industrialist‚ took benefit from the cheap workers from agricultural communities to develop an industry (Doc 5). The workers had to earn enough to maintain

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    Great Depression affect Americans by forcing them to work for long hours (Doc 1) and for little pay (Doc 4/6) and driving them to become hobos and beggars and leave their families and lives behind to search for money (Doc 2). People were desperate for money and would do most anything to be able to eat that night. Many people used to make a few hundred dollars a week and they were reduced to maybe ten to fifteen dollars (Doc 4). Americans had a hard time comprehending how the entire nation went from

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    party (Doc S). Under the threat of war with France‚ Congress in 1798 passed four laws in an effort to strengthen the Federal government‚ known as the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798. These acts did not permit anyone to criticize the government at all‚ through writing‚ or any other shape‚ form‚ or fashion as if their views on government did not matter at all (Doc B). Many people wished that acts would be executed for they knew that it would divide the nation that was trying to become one (Doc O).

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