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    What defines a hero is their characteristics and how they embody the human spirit is their selflessness and they action towards others meaning that no matter the consequences. that’s what Martin Luther King was to the world and to me that’s why he was a greater example of a hero. King was such a selfless leader and great civil rights mover and maybe if not for him segregation would still be allowed to this day. Kings early childhood years started a bit rough. What started when he was 6 years old

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    Dreaming About Freedom Martin Luther King Jr.’s "I Have a Dream" speech is one of the most successful and most legendary speeches in United States history. Martin Luther King Jr. was a masterful speaker‚ who established a strong command of rhetorical strategies. By his eloquent use of ethos‚ logos‚ and pathos‚ as well as his command of presentation skills and rhetorical devices‚ King was able to persuade his generation that "the Negro is not free" (King 1). His speech became the rallying cry for

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    Disobedience Without a doubt‚ Socrates and Martin Luther King Jr are among the elite in terms of critical thinking and on getting the masses on board with their plan of action. However‚ they both hold very different views when it comes to the topic of civil disobedience. On one side of the spectrum you have Socrates‚ who believes that civil disobedience is never justified and should by no means be a course of action. On the other end Martin Luther King Jr‚ who firmly stands by his argument that civil

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    my speech. On seeing this topic‚ I believe that most of us may naturally think of the famous Martin Luther King’s speech. So do I. On 28th August‚ 1963‚ the speech Martin Luther King presented in Washington D.C that advocated the equality of black people. Boundless is the sea for fish to dive at will‚ unlimited is the sky for birds to fly at ease. Though may not be as sublime as Martin Luther King’s‚ everyone carries a dream of their own. Perhaps‚ it’s the grand ambitions; perhaps‚ it’s the adolescent

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    Savannah Major February 23‚ 2013 Hon. English/ H.3 Philosophies of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X The late 1950s to mid-1960s was a time when violence and injustice had reached its peak. Many people were treated unfairly and the mood of the country overall was very gloomy and unhappy. Martin Luther King and Malcolm X were both very well-known activists who fought to make things equal and right. Both activists shared similar beliefs against the racial injustice brought against African Americans

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    Martin Luther King‚ Jr. was born on January 15‚ 1929‚ in Atlanta‚ Georgia. He died on April 4‚ 1968. The sermons and speeches of Dr. Martin Luther King‚ Jr.‚ mirrored the southern black preaching that covered his childhood in Atlanta. As a boy‚ he witnessed many occasions when his dad and mom refused to be intimidated by segregationist policies. His parents are always linked their resistance to moral values. Kings first speech to an audience was his “Give us the Ballot” during the prayer pilgrimage

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    Written over 114 years after Henry David Thoreau’s essay “Civil Disobedience”‚ Martin Luther King wrote his most famous essay; “Letter from a Birmingham Jail.” In the times of Henry David Thoreau there was only one topic of politics in the United States‚ slavery. Many southerners wanted to keep slavery while many northerners were against it. Henry David Thoreau was a white northerner that was against slavery‚ and he was willing to go to jail for it. He proved that in writing his famous letter. In

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    With the use of logos appeal‚ Martin Luther King Jr. logically proves each point he makes objectively and uses indisputable evidence to support his statements. Dr. King went to great lengths to educate his people in the benefit of non-violent aggression. He chose to respond to hard and brutal acts with non-violent resistance. In his letter‚ he tries to support the fact that they had no alternative except to prepare for direct action. However‚ Martin Luther King‚ Jr. has several logical examples of

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    transcend ordinary understanding‚ or of a direct‚ intimate union of the soul with God through contemplation or ecstasy” (Dictionary.com‚ 2016). In his “I have a dream speech”‚ the act‚ Luther being the agent‚ mentioned “Lord” and “God” five times. Many of the speaker’s “God terms” were similar to the Bible‚ where is seems Luther had paraphrased to explain his worldview. This is why I believe that King stressed the worldview of mysticism more than the other four elements. In 2016‚ there have been many cases

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    The I have a Dream Speech is a powerful speech by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. He had delivered this speech during the Washington march for Jobs and Freedom. The speech talks about how African-Americans were treated horribly‚ it talks about how certain states treats the “Negros” and‚ how during the year that slaves were freed it seemed as if it would only get better for the people of African descent. America had since then turned its back on its colored citizens and this had made the promise stated

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