Mary Rose Anne A. Deriquito TTH 8:30-10:00 BSA-2 Determine whether the fallacies committed by the following arguments are formal fallacies or informal fallacies. 1. If Rasputin was really mad‚ then he deceived Czar Nicholas II. Rasputin was not really mad. Therefore‚ he did not deceive Czar Nicholas II. Answer: Formal Fallacies Explanation: This is a hypothetical syllogism and is a deductive argument. If it will be interchange it will be valid. 2. Everything that runs has feet. The Columbia River
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Chapter 5-Case Incident 1: Finding People Who Are Passionate About What They Do 1. Identify some of the established recruiting techniques that apparently underlie Trilogy’s approach to attracting talent. Trilogy utilizes college recruiting as often as possible. They also frequent job fairs and computer science departments at colleges to look for possible recruits. They do not mind spending money to obtain a prospective employee. They fly employees in for a three-day visit‚ and encourage them
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select Submit. Module 1: Driving is Your Responsibility: Complete the K-W-L information below. K- What you Know Discuss two things you know about driving. 1. Driving is a privilege not a right. 2. Always be alert and attentive‚ don’t do anything that could potentially endanger you‚ a passenger‚ or others. W—What you Want to know Discuss two things you want to know about driving. 1. At a four way intersection‚ cars arrive at the same time‚ who has the right of way. 2. What is the color of
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Information Faculty EXERCISES 1 • Create an activity diagram and a set of use case descriptions for the process of buying glasses from the viewpoint of the patient. • The first step is to see an eye doctor who will give you a prescription. Once you have a prescription‚ you go to a glasses store‚ where you select your frames and place the order for your glasses. Once the glasses have been made‚ you return to the store for a fitting and pay for the glasses. 2 EXERCISE 2 • Create an activity diagram
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Module 1 & 2 Journal Module 1: Driving is Your Responsibility: Complete the K-W-L information below. K- What you Know Discuss two things you know about driving. 1. I know that you have to have your seatbelt on when and while you are driving. 2. That you have to have your hands on the wheel at ten and two. W—What you Want to know Discuss two things you want to know about driving. 1. If you get stuck at a green light and it is green and there is a cop and you are in the middle of the road what
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CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION Technology plays vital role in innovation. Over the years we have seen technology to evolve like a child burgeons into adulthood. Without technology‚ life would be more difficult than it already is. We are now living in a world which is technologically civilized‚ where almost all human activities involve the use of technology and every person wants to be recognized with a device or gadget which is technically advanced. Nowadays‚ computer serves an important part
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Chapter 5 : Philippine Values VALUES - Comes from the Latin word “valere”‚ which means to be strong or to be worth. -Those standards by which a group of society judges the desirability and importance of people‚ ideas‚ actions or objects. -shared conceptions of or beliefs in what are considered desirable or undesirable. - Something deserving of one’s best effort‚ something worth living for‚ and if need be worth dying for. DEFINITION OF VALUES - Enduring conception of the preferable which influences
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Understanding the Sociological Imagination From Chapter 1 of Sociology for Everyone‚ Canadian 1/e. Bruce Ravelli. Michelle Webber. John Patterson. Copyright © 2011 by Pearson Canada. All rights reserved. Understanding the Sociological Imagination module 1 THE SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION module 4 THEORIES CHARLES WRIGHT MILLS AND THE SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION WESTERN MARXISM AND GRAMSCI’S CONCEPT PETER BERGER’S VIEW OF THE SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION
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planning: 1. Make provisions in the systems plan for taking small steps rapidly. “Don’t have a plan with goals extending so far into the future that there is no way of tracking it.” 2. Develop alternative plans when significant contradictory trends are discerned in business objectives or technology. 3. Interface the systems plan with the corporate plan‚ modifying both appropriately. 4. Document the systems plan in a format intelligible to top management and arrange for personal presentation. 5. Establish
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02-45282-kivisto.qxd 6/30/2007 10:58 AM Page 41 CHAPTER 2 The Weberian Theory of Rationalization and the McDonaldization of Contemporary Society George Ritzer George Ritzer is Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the University of Maryland. His major areas of interest are sociological theory‚ globalization‚ and the sociology of consumption. He has served as chair of the American Sociological Association’s sections on theory (1989–1990) and organizations and occupations (1980–1981). He has
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