important non-milling use is to pump water‚ either for land drainage or to extract groundwater. Contents [hide] * 1 Windmills in antiquity * 2 Horizontal windmills * 3 Vertical windmills * 3.1 Post mill * 3.2 Hollow-post mill * 3.3 Tower mill * 3.4 Smock mill * 3.5 Sails * 3.6 Machinery * 3.7 Spread and decline * 4 Windpumps * 5 Wind turbine * 6 See also * 7 References * 8 Further reading * 9 External links | -------------------------------------------------
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\ Malden Mills Antonio Almeida Ethics and Corporate Social Responsibility Prof. Paul S. Napolitano November 10‚ 2011 The corporate culture of Malden Mills began in 1907 by Aaron Feuerstein ’s grandfather. His legacy was to continue to provide high quality‚ well-paying jobs to the people of Massachusetts. When Aaron Feuerstein became CEO of the family business Malden Mills‚ he continued his grandfather ’s legacy and continued to
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Thomas Dublin in “Women‚ Work‚ and Protest in the Early Lowell Mills” In Thomas Dublin’s article‚ “Women‚ Work‚ and Protest in the Early Lowell Mills‚” he talks about the conditions of factories. He describes the work and the personal problems that women endured working in factories during the Industrial Revolution. Lowell was originally a rural area. “In 1820‚ there had been no city at all-only a dozen family farms along the Merrimack River in East Chelmsford.” (Dublin 264). A year later‚ a group
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value primarily on the labor theory. Without a clear grasp of the concept of demand‚ Smith‚ Malthus and Ricardo often raise confusing and self-contradictory explanations of the definition of “value.” The utilitarianists‚ like Jeremy Bentham and J. S. Mill‚ offered a revolutionary approach to understand the demand-side of the economy. They consider the usefulness of the product as a whole rather than its process of production. In the development of the utilitarianism‚ reformists present a much more realistic
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Nader Mohsen Obaid 42382 John Stewart Mill‚ On Liberty. Chapter 2 In his essay "On Liberty"‚ Mill suggests that the government shouldn’t act by the appeal of the people and their wants because the public shouldn’t have the authority of force over their elected governor. The government is much more unsafe when it relies on unreliable public belief. Definitely‚ public opinion and belief is the well-liked response of mankind‚ but making this opinion requires suppressing a lot of others. This error
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Instructor Gallup Kant or Mill 14 November 2011 The topic of Kant and John Stuart Mill produces much debate. Both scholars have their own beliefs that they deem to be appropriate point of views in the way man should view a moral life. In this paper I plan on elaborating on both Kant and Mill’s point of views. This paper will first talk about John Stuart Mill’s beliefs on morality and what he deems appropriate. Then in the next segment of the paper‚ Kant views will be dissected and discussed
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John Stuart Mill’s account of Utilitarianism claims “that actions are right in proportion as they tend to promote happiness; wrong as they tend to produce the reverse of happiness” (Mill‚ 7). In addition‚ “the happiness which forms the utilitarian standard of what is right in conduct is not the agent’s own happiness but that of all concerned” (17). Individuals are often confronted with a choice which benefits others but fails to contribute something in return. Before deciding how to act‚ one evaluates
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John Stuart Mill suggests that a person’s ethical decision-making process should be based solely upon the amount of happiness that the person can receive. Although Mill fully justifies himself‚ his approach lacks certain criteria for which happiness can be considered. Happiness should be judged‚ not only by pleasure‚ but by pain as well. This paper will examine Mill’s position on happiness‚ and the reasoning behind it. Showing where there are agreements and where there are disagreements will critique
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which makes him extremely controversial because viewers either love or hate him. He is known for turning his ideas into giant works of art and also for making millions of dollars when selling these pieces. The “Balloon Dog” sculpture of a balloon puppy is not made of the typical balloon; instead it is made out a chrome metal painted a reddish pink. The mirrorized finish only adds to the piece because not only do you see a ten foot tall dog‚ you see yourself (the consumer) in the reflection. The sculpture
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life examples and Mills ‘The Promise’ (Mills‚ 1959) this will assist in creating this distinction‚ and will be used to help resolve the predicament of whether people still feel trapped in the twenty-first century in the same way that Mills described in the mid-twentieth century. Personal Troubles • Leading sentence/ Definition o Personal troubles are daily complications experienced daily by an individual‚ acting as a source of stress and difficulty in one’s life. Mills describes troubles
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