Krista Smith A&P 2530 Unit 8 Case Study 1: Nick’s Story A. Prickling sensation in both feet Weak reflexes Loss of muscle tone Loss of feeling in feet Symptoms both sensory and motor B. The symptoms Nick is describing are likely caused by peripheral nerve damage; Not damage to the CNS. C. Diabetic neuropathies damage peripheral nerves. The component of the reflex that is most likely to be damaged in Nick’s situation would be the patellar reflex and the Achilles reflex. D. The division of the
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Nick Pinto’s zealous article‚ “The Bail Trap” emphasizes how people end up in jail for simply being unable to afford the cost of bail after being tried in court‚ and the effects jail has on the individuals afterwards. Pinto uses the story of Tyrone Tomlin throughout the piece to demonstrate the effects bail has on a person before they are put in to jail‚ while they are in jail‚ and life after jail. Thompsons story shows that though he was innocent but could not afford bail‚ he was still sent to
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Kiri Carlson Mrs. Ackerman Honors Literature 13 February 2014 Should We Care-Away or Care-For Nick Carraway? When pursuing relationships in The Great Gatsby‚ we are introduced to the characters with a sort of step-by-step process. Unfortunately‚ as our knowledge about the characters expands‚ our feelings of enchantment soon transform to that of disenchantment. Initially overlooking their flaws or putting them off to the side‚ it is only later that we realize the peril of each of their imperfections
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Murder is wrong‚ but the simulation theory might not agree with that. Nick Bostrom published a paper proposing the simulation theory; a world that exist inside a computer. Assuming Bostrom’s theory is true‚ then not only do we exist in an augmented virtual reality‚ but that we could get away with killing another human being. I will first explain the simulation theory‚ then state the fact that we cannot be held responsible for murder‚ and then finally conclude with an objection expressing that murder
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A fool can be defined in many meanings. The word could mean "a silly person"‚ or "one who professionally counterfeits folly for the entertainment of others‚ a jester‚ clown" or "one who has little or no reason or intellect" or "one who is made to appear to be a fool" according to dictionary definition. In William Shakespeare’s comedy‚ Twelfth Night‚ Feste the clown is not the only fool who is subject to foolery as unconventional fools dominate the play. He and many other characters combine their
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May Day Eve By Nick Joaquin The major characters in May Day Eve are Badoy‚ Agueda‚ Anastasia‚Agueda’s daughter‚ and Voltaire (Badoy’s grandson).[5] Agueda and Badoy have different personalities. Agueda was described to be a bold‚ liberated‚ and a non-conformist young woman who was “ahead of her time”. While Badoy was characterized in the beginning as a promiscuous young man who wanted to prove his machismo‚ he realized that he was “deliriously in love” with Agueda. As Don Badoy Montoya visited his
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The very first impression that anyone might have when reading a Shakespearian play that include a fool as one of its characters is that he is used to provide entertainment to the play. Such an impression isn’t‚ by any mean‚ correct. Shakespeare‚ in fact‚ usually used such characters to say something about human psychology and the way they react to life. In addition‚ he had that gift of a great writer who had a penetrating understanding of his audience’s intellectual level. Accordingly he was always
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Although the Fool and Cordelia are similarly candid towards their King‚ they never interact in Shakespeare’s King Lear‚ because the Fool is a chaotic influence while Cordelia is a stabilizing force. While the Fool and Cordelia both act in the Lear’s best interest‚ it is not always evident to Lear. The Fool’s actions often anger the King‚ and lead to an increase in his madness. On the other hand‚ Cordelia’s actions more often soothe Lear‚ and coax him back into sanity. Another commonality between
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“The Rich Fool.” Each parable has a different moral‚ or the contrary. These two parables have a lot in common‚ for instance the moral of both stories are exceedingly similar‚ and the parables both have consequences. Something different between the two parables is how “How Much Land Does a Man Need” uses irony unlike “The Rich Fool.” They both have similarities yet‚ they also have their differences. First off‚ the moral of both stories “How Much Land Does a Man Need”‚ and “The Rich Fool” are very
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cities really. Nick Carraway; the narrator‚ represents all that is good an wholesome in the great midwest. He is a well-educated man who aspires to be a bond broker. His character is conflicted internally and externally throughout the novel but really culminates into a loathing for all things eastern. Carraway’s farmboy charm and doe-eyed innocence is put to the test when he meets The Great Jay Gatsby. Gatsby represents all things Nick is unfamiliar with and is curious about. Nick‚ being from the
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