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    Milton Glaser

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    The SVA Theatre was a project proposed to Milton Glaser‚ it was based on moving image. The image above is the start of the project. This image is made up of 3 sets of different lines which are all stripes‚ the blue lines are horizontal‚ the green lines are vertical and the red lines are diagonal. I think the lines used are similar to Paul Rand’s IBM logo‚ the horizontal lines in blue are the same lines used in Paul Rand’s IBM Logo‚ the lines are horizontal and have stripes‚ these are the most obvious

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    Poverty and Blindness

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    Salman A Khan Professor L. Harkness ENG 111-29 21 April 2015 Poverty and Blindness Blindness is a major threat in the developing countries. It impedes a person’s cognitive function and affects an economy. There are multiple patients around the world who cannot afford cure to their blindness. While affordability is one issue‚ accessibility is another. Rural population suffers because they have no access to hospitals in those remote areas. This workshop presented a similar issue. The first part was

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    Milton Friedman

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    Milton Friedman Milton Friedman‚ like so many great life stories‚ was the subject of a very tough childhood. He was son to a couple of poor immigrants‚ born on 31 July 1912‚ in New York‚ America. At the age of fifteen‚ Friedman’s father died. Despite this‚ he won a scholarship to both Rutgers University and the University of Chicago‚ where he achieved a Bachelor of the Arts degree in economics. The very next year he received an MA at Chicago University. He then worked for the National Bureau

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    Milton Friedman

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    Milton Friedman takes the position that corporations cannot be socially responsible‚ only people can have responsibilities. In continuing with this thought‚ he then suggest that social responsibility is then directed at the corporate executive of a business‚ not the business as a whole. The corporate executive has primary responsibility to his employers to conduct business as they see fit‚ and manage the business to create the most profit while following the “basic rules of society”. We must also

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    Blindness in Macbeth

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    Blindness Has Consequences MACBETH – FINAL ESSAY ENG 3U When a character in a tragedy fails to see what they really are‚ or who other people around them really are‚ tragedy‚ normally consisting of death results. In the play Macbeth by William Shakespeare many characters fail to see the truth that is themselves‚ or another person. The play reads‚ “I think not of them: Yet when we can entreat an hour to serve‚ We would spend it in some words upon that business If you would grant me the time.” (Act

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    Deaf Blindness

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    Deaf Blindness Most people assume that a deaf blind child is someone who is not able to hear or see. “Our country’s special educational law defines deaf-blindness as the combination of the visual and hearing impairment” (“Deaf Blindness”). These two impairments make the person lose his or her communication skills‚ developmental and educational needs. The National Consortium on Deaf-Blindness observes that the key feature of deaf-blindness is that the "combination of losses limits access to

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    Colour Blindness

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    Colour blindness is a very well known deficiency that affects approximately 8% of the population worldwide (Fluck 2006). People who are colour blind are not technically blind‚ they have a decreased ability to identify colours and in the most extreme cases‚ not able to see colours at all. The technical term for being colour blind is achromatopsia which means the inability to see any colours at all. However‚ most people are only colour deficient and not fully color blind therefore they can be classified

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    Othello: Blindness

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    hesitation when is comes to speaking her mind‚ even to a powerful war general. Emilia even curses that‚ “…may his [Othello’s] pernicious soul/ rot half a grain a day!” (5.2. 154-155) She even puts Othello beneath a homeless drunk‚ “A beggar in his drink/ could not have laid such terms upon his callet.” (4.2.120-121)‚ where Desdemona’s friend describes that even a drunk would not even call his mistress a whore. This exposes Othello and reveals him as insolent. Emilia’s great risk was selflessly done

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    Ethical Blindness

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    Ethical Blindness Guido Palazzo • Franciska Krings • Ulrich Hoffrage Received: 1 June 2010 / Accepted: 22 November 2011 Ó Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2011 Abstract Many models of (un)ethical decision making assume that people decide rationally and are in principle able to evaluate their decisions from a moral point of view. However‚ people might behave unethically without being aware of it. They are ethically blind. Adopting a sensemaking approach‚ we argue that ethical blindness results

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    river blindness

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    The case of Blindness of Merck is one of the good examples‚ which can be used to analyse the four theories of ethic such as Utilitarianism‚ Kantianism‚ Rights and Justice as well as CRS. This essay will be focus on Utilitarianism theory. River blindness is a disease that afflicts around 18 million peoples in Africa and Asia. It is the result of black fly’s bite. Merck is a pharmaceutical company located in New Jersey which is known for productivity of research and development effort. In the

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