English 121 March 17‚ 2011 In your Journal: “A reply to Rifkin” The embryonic cloning debate touches down ethical issues that are each debatable. One is the debate whether it is healthy and or ethical to obtain eggs from a woman for stem cells. It calls for hormone treatment and surgery. With all surgeries‚ there is always a risk‚ but with this one it’s an ethical debate if it is right or not. Another reason why is that people are afraid that we will fall down a slippery slope into human cloning
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such as animal rights‚ which are more important. “A Change of heart About Animals”‚ by Jeremy Rifkin‚ is an article where he argues how animals have feelings and should have their own rights. He describes how animals have the ability to learn. What he doesn’t do is describe animals as a lower class‚ but as “Our fellow creatures” so he states in his article. In Rifkin’s article he uses language such as ethos‚ pathos‚ and logos while using a persuasive tone. Ethos is expressed when Rifkin credits
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player? What about one to come through the NBA and help conquer racism on top of that? Well‚ ponder no more because in The Nation’s article titled‚ “Jeremy Lin: Taking the Weight” Dave Zirin offers an excellent analysis about the topic due to the author’s skills with rhetoric. Dave Zirin is an American political sportswriter‚ among the most famous in the world. A very talented writer‚ Zirin is the sports editor for The Nation magazine. The Nation is a magazine published weekly about opinions‚ politics
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Did you know that animals and humans have lots of things alike? Kangaroos carry babies just like mothers carry their babies too. Tigers have to teach their babies how to hunt and humans have to teach their babies how to walk and talk. Birds have to break down their babies’ food‚ just like our mothers have to start feeding us little by little. Rifkin in his article “A Change of Heart about Animals” offers some compelling evidence that humans and animals share lots of things‚ but not all of his example
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Introduction Change is one of the most basic and consistent basis of life‚ it is constant throughout every aspect of our lives. Even with its consistent nature and ever presence‚ it is our human nature to avoid and resist it. The Heart of Change‚ by John Kotter and David Cohen (2002)‚ shows the processes by which all the negative atmosphere around change can be made to be positive and change can be effective. Kotter and Cohen focus on redirecting attitudes about change and minimizing the disruptions
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Bourne’s case in Change of Heart by Jodi Picoult. Maggie is Shay’s lawyer‚ and she is trying to convince the judge that Shay practices his own unique religion similar to extinct religions. If salvation before his death is key to his religion‚ he must be hung instead of lethally injected to preserve his heart. His heart is a perfect match to Claire Nealon’s. Claire is the daughter of the police officer and stepsister to the young girl Shay is convicted of killing. If America is all about freedom of religion
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Rifkin is able to make his audience believe that we should do more for animals by using very negative language when talking about how we currently treat animals. At the end of his article there is a paragraph where Rifkin asks a lot of questions. Almost all of his questions have negative words. For example‚ he talks about "animals subjected each year to painful laboratory experiments" and "raised under the most inhumane conditions." He also says that animals are "for slaughter and human consumption
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Verschleiser English Emergence into an Animal Kingdom In Heart of Darkness what initially stuck out to me was the extent in which Joseph Conrad describes the un-human like qualities of Africans. At one point in the excerpt Conrad calls africans a “prehistoric man”‚ and at another point describes the way in which the Africans live as a “madhouse”. It seemed to me as if he was not looking at a people rather Conrad was looking onto Africans as if they were caged animals simply there as a resource for Conrad
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Close Reading: Old Major’s Powerful Use of Pronouns The first chapter of Animal Farm opens with a gathering at the end of the day. The animals excitedly gather in the barn to hear Old Major‚ a highly regarded figure on the farm‚ share a strange dream with them all. However‚ before he shares his dream of a nation of animals free from the reign of man‚ he gives an eloquent speech concerning the current situation of the animals’ exploitation by Man. Old Major starts his speech by addressing the crowd
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Karenne Uribe Mrs. Ponce English 12.6 13 December 2014 In this article‚ “A Change of Heart about Animals‚” Jeremy Rifkin argues that animals are the same as humans because they have emotions‚ cognitive abilities and are self-aware. Rifkin supports his argument by using the rhetorical tools of comparing and pathos. His purpose is to encourage people to take action in order to treat animals more humanely. His audience is people who read the LA Times and his tone is compassionate. Rifkin’s purpose
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