Article Summary Sontag‚ Susan. “Regarding the Pain of Others”. Caroline Shrodes‚ et.al‚ Eds. The Conscious Reader. Boston: Longman P. 2012. In Sontags article she is trying to explain why we humans are so interested in pain or violence being brought upon other people to where we find it as being somewhat amusing and are aroused by this occurrence. When we encounter an event of pain and suffering we tend to keep watching and hope the event furthers instead of just looking away. The viewing
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Though Sontag speaks and disagrees with the form of interpretation of art that can be invoked as a stereotype for art critics/interpreters in the modern world today‚ Aristotle’s representational view of art battles that notion and challenges the view of‚ whether imitational art is a art form in itself‚ or just simply the product of the egos that critics possess in hopes of polishing their appearances as an connoisseur of finding the latent contents in artworks. In “Against Interpretation” Sontag
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Photography shows us the world‚ but only the world the photographer creates. According to Sontag‚ photos show that we understand through a photo in the way we see the picture. Seeing photos can limit our understanding because we only see the picture not whats going on around it. In other words the viewer only sees what’s within the frame. Images allowed us to see situations that occurred; however‚ it is extremely limited in what the audience can see. I qualify Sontag’s claim that photography limits
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record incriminates. Starting with their use by the Paris police in the murderous roundup of Communards in June 1871‚ photographs became a useful tool of modern states in the surveillance and control of their increasingly mobile populations. In an other version of its utility‚ the camera record jus tifies. A photograph passes for incontrovertible proof that a given thing happened. The picture may distort; but there is always a presumption that something exists‚ or did exist‚ which is like what’s
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the “reality principle”. Last but not least‚ the Superego is the source of conscience that inhibits the socially undesirable impulses of the Id. It operates on the “moral principle”. Both the Id and Superego are displayed by Henry in the movie‚ “Regarding Henry”. His natural state however‚ is predominantly the Superego. Some of Henry’s actions in the movie can be classified as him acting on his Id. For instance‚ his affair with Linda. If Henry had thought that out rationally‚ then hopefully he
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In the film Regarding Henry‚ Henry Turner is a big shot trial Lawyer who will stop at nothing to win his cases. He is brutal‚ tough‚ and at times‚ dishonest. His aggressiveness would make him seem like Freud’s theory of the Id side of one’s consciousness‚ but his Id makes him a naturally good person and his evil side comes from his Superego. In the beginning of the movie‚ Henry ends up going through a traumatic experience. When going to a store to buy some cigarettes‚ Henry is confused when the
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it is all self centered and based off what you desire. The second is the Ego‚ a rational and thoughtful decision maker‚ that functions on reality. The final concept is the Superego‚ which is strongly based off of one’s moral principle. The film Regarding Henry in 1991‚ by director Mike Nichols‚ starring Harrison Ford‚ an angry hard nosed businessman‚ Henry‚ played by Harrison Ford‚ takes a trip to buy some cigarettes but is shot by a robber‚ putting him into a state of not having the ability to speak
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empower the practitioners to control their pain perception. It was conducted in 2011 by the neuroscientist Fadel Zeidan who followed the already established by Wilder Penfield fact - that sensation of pain is perceived by the brain at the same place where the feeling of touch is - that is‚ the somatosensory cortex. The experiment hypothesised that there will be a noticeable difference in the process of pain perception and reaction in people with chronic pain that had undergone MBSR intervention. Baseline
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Nurses Knowledge and Attitude Regarding Pain Management in Hospitalized Patients Erica Grosseibl NRS 433-V December 12‚ 2012 A significant number of patients continue to experience unrelieved pain during hospitalization despite decades of research‚ improved therapeutic measures and advancement in technology. Delays in recovery‚ decreased patient satisfaction‚ decreased quality of life and increased healthcare costs are
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J. Lusk Defintion Essay Pain No matter who you are‚ what you have and what you’ve achieved in life‚ we’ve all felt pain somewhere in our life. What is pain? Pain is one of the six universal emotions alongside happiness‚ sadness‚ surprise‚ fear‚ disgust and anger. The majority of these emotions indicate a form of pain. Pain is an emotion that feels like a catastrophic turn of events in our body that has damaged a part of our personal life like our world has fallen apart. Pain is an emotion that’s
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