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    Persuasive

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    Plastic Surgery Millions of people‚ both men and women‚ undergo plastic surgery every year. While some plastic surgery is done for medical reasons‚ such as reconstruction after an accident‚ many other procedures are voluntary. People see a flaw and feel the need to fix it. Whether their breasts are too small‚ their nose is too big‚ or their stomach isn’t flat enough‚ plastic surgery can fix it. So the big question remains‚ is plastic surgery a way to promote beauty or destroy? I believe the

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    Persuasive

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    Assignment12.4 Anna Guzman * Title- Why education is important * General Purpose- Inform * Specific Purpose- Inform students why education is important * Thesis: Why education is important  Education is important for so many reasons. Having an education can take you places you never imagined. And education can lead you to endless possibilities. Being educated can allow you to direct your own life to make your own decisions and pave your own path for your life

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    Divisibility Argument

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    DIVISIBILITY ARGUMENT This paper will discuss the dualism’s Divisibility Argument. This argument relies on Leibniz’s Law and uses a different property to prove the distinctness of brain states of mental states. Mary‚ who is a materialist‚ presents several objections to that argument. Her main objection corresponds to the first/third-person approach. She believes that Dave presents that argument only from the first-person approach‚ which is introspection‚ and totally disregards the third-person

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    Use of Prayer and Scripture in Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Integration of Psychology and Theology Tamala Rivers February 16‚ 2012 Summary This article focuses on the use of prayer and scripture in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT). First you must focus on the biblical approach which you acknowledge Gods love and deal with past hurts in a proper manner. You also must focus on Gods Holy Spirit and his scriptures. As the therapist you should not be in self‚ you have to focus on your client

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    The Moral Argument

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    THE MORAL ARGUMENT How do we explain the fact that people often refrain from immoral acts even when there is no risk of their being caught? There are many formulations of the moral argument but they all have as their starting point the phenomenon (fact) of moral conscience. In essence the moral argument poses the question: where does our conscience‚ our sense of morality come from if not from God? It also asserts that if we accept the existence of objective moral laws we must accept the existence

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    Inductive Argument

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    2014 Inductive and Deductive Argument Instructor: Ivey Shelton CRT/205 While reading both articles The Death Penalty Violates the Constitution of the United States and Cyberbullying Has a Broader Impact than Traditional Bullying‚ I found that there were both deductive and inductive argument presented with in the articles. On the first article about the death penalty‚ the author used inductive arguments to make his point. An example of and inductive argument in this article is “Furthermore

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    The Moral Argument

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    The Moral Argument Kant’s Moral Argument: 1) Kant claims Human beings are rational‚ moral decision makers. 2) Morality is a matter of doing ones moral duty. However: 3) Kant rejects the idea that God’s commands are the basis of morality‚ he emphasises reason is the basis of morality. 4) In which case how‚ if at all‚ does God fit into Kant’s system? Kant’s rejection of other forms of argument for God’s existence Kant argued that the existence of God is beyond human conception

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    argument essay

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    to agree on our ideas‚ and we had a variety of choices on ways to persuade our classmates. yet I believe my group were the most confident in ourselves‚ which was the reason we won and persuaded the most. I believe the reason we were the most persuasive was because we had certainty in our choice which showed our confidence that led to a influence on everyone else. When you aren’t certain about something‚ you would probably never attempt in trying it. Unlike the terriost who were extremely

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    Topics in Persuasive

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    Persuasive Speech Topics:  1. Academic dishonesty. 2. Advertising standards. 3. Artificial hormones in food. 4. Athletes should stay loyal to teams. 5. Bachelor/bachelorette parties. 6. Be true to yourself. 7. Becoming foster parents. 8. Benefits of breast reduction surgery. 9. Best movie ever. 10. Breast feeding. 11. Buy security alarms. 12. Buying products that are made in the U.S. 13. Cable TV monopolies. 14. Capital punishment be abolished

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    Hospers' Argument

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    providing vital grounds on how it can ultimately be attained and by adopting the two different senses of knowing‚ the strong and weak sense. He then fortifies his argument by proving the incoherence of a doubter. This essay will look on his arguments against radical scepticism and finally to what extent it is successful. In his argument‚ he emphasises on the three main requirements for knowing‚ one is that the thing has to be true‚ secondly‚ one has to believe in that thing and lastly it requires

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