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    Indirect Realism Analysis

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    Metaphysical Realism can be defined as objects entities‚ things exit independently of our minds. There is a real world external to our perception‚ thoughts and desires. Direct realism give us direct and immediate contact with the external world. What we perceive as outside of ourselves in the world is really "outthere" . This means that there is anything to believe expect to understand that immaterial minds and ideal are real and they have significant influence on who were are as a human being.

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    An idealist is a person who knows what they want and will try to do anything to obtain it‚ it turns into their goal in life. Gatsby displays that he is very hard working‚ but after he meets Daisy again all he can think about is to try and win her back at all costs‚ he figures that the only way to win her back is to impress her with his money. Now that Gatsby is invading the relationship between Tom and Daisy it plays a big part on how Gatsby dies. In the novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

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    clearly and this idealism causes him to make bad decisions and for him to not understand human behaviour and thus unable to see the world clearly. Brutus believes that honour makes a man worthy. He believes that he is an honourable man which makes him higher ranking than his peers such as Cassius or Casca. Brutus often thinks of the wellbeing of Rome before himself. He imagines an idealism world free of corruptions‚ greed and kings. Cassius is able to use honour and Brutus’s idealism against him and

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    knowledge is information or awareness a person has acquired through experience. A couple of important views on the basis of knowledge includes rationalism and transcendental idealism. Rationalism is defined in the book by being the view that knowledge can be obtained through reason‚ not by the aid of the senses. While Transcendental Idealism is Immanuel Kant’s view that the world that we see around us is constructed in our mind. Rationalists argue that most of their knowledge does not come from experience;

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    Realism In Global Poverty

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    Global Poverty & Realism Jinpeng Zhu 11/19 Global Poverty According to the World Bank (2015b)‚ from the most recent estimates in 2012‚ 12.7% of the world’s population (896 million people) lived at or below $1.90 a day. It was a decrease from 1990 which was at 37% (1.95 billion) and in 1981‚ at 44% (1.99 billion). Among regions‚ East Asia had the most decline in poverty from 80% in 1981 to 7.2% in 2012. In Sub-Saharan Africa‚ it stood at 42.6% in 2012 (World Bank‚ 2015b). East Asia and Pacific

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    Realism and WWI

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    WHAT CAUSED WORLD WAR 1? As Hobbes said in Leviathan‚ “if any two men desire the same thing‚ which nevertheless they cannot both enjoy‚ they become enemies”. Men are equal and interact in anarchy‚ driven by competition‚ diffidence‚ and glory. World War I was prompted by the self-centered behavior of Germany in the early 20th century combined with the achievement of balance of power in Europe. For realists‚ the war could have been a case of security dilemma for Germany in a system of balanced power;

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    Dead

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    ------------------------------------------------- State of matter From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia States of matter in physics are the distinct forms that different phases of matter take on. Four states of matter are observable in everyday life: solid‚ liquid‚ gas‚ and plasma. Further states are possible but do not naturally occur in our environment: Bose–Einstein condensates‚ neutron stars. Other states‚ such as quark-gluon plasmas‚ are believed to be possible. For a complete list of all

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    Auden a Modern Poet

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    Auden: A Modern Poet To justify Auden as a great modern poet it can be said that Auden stands out among modern poets by his earnest effort to be great modern thinker. He was well versed in history‚ philosophy and theology and had a remarkable grip on contemporary currents of thought in political theory‚ science and psychology. Auden extraordinary style and diction make his poetry strikingly obscure. Sometimes the style makes his poem difficult to understand. This difficulty and obscurity arises

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    Realism in Heart of Darkness

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    | 2. ‘Those who read me know my conviction that the world‚ the temporal world‚ rests on a few very simple ideas; so simple that they must be as old as the hills. It rests notably‚ among others‚ on the idea of Fidelity’ (Joseph Conrad). How is ‘realism’ problematized by any one of the texts in this block? You must make reference to at least one definition of literary terms (for instance‚ Baldick’s definition in the course reader.) Joseph Conrad’s ‘Heart Of Darkness’ bases itself around the theme

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    However‚ these contrasting theories each have inherent conceptual flaws and often are best useful when used simultaneously. Realism fails to explain intrastate conflicts and the ability of states to create security threats for their citizens‚ it overlooks issues of food security and health security‚ and it ignores genocide‚ oppression and gender violence. It downplays the impact

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