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    The Matrix

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    3: Names are highlighted throughout the film and are used to further explain religious concepts as well as deepen the plot. Choose three names from the movie and explain the religious concepts that they are illustrating. Option 4: While The Matrix borrows heavily from Buddhist philosophy certain elements of the film seem out of place in that they directly contradict Buddhist ideas. Write an essay that highlights three of these elements and explain how they contradict the beliefs of Buddhism

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    Utopias are the quest for someone’s perfect society. Usually only one person is happy in a utopia everyone else suffers. Utopias are bad In many utopia there is only one person that does not have it hard. In the story Harrison Bergeron. There is a utopia. The utopia is that everyone is equal. In this quote you will why it is considered a utopia. In this story everyone but one person as to wear something to make them less strong to be equal to someone or something. “Go on rest the bag for a little

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    Matrix

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    PUBLIC RELATIONS IN THE NEEDS OF THE ENVIRONMENT * Public relations may include an organization or individual gaining exposure to their audiences using topics of public interest and news items that do not require direct payment. * Lee published a Declaration of Principles‚ which said that public relations work should be done in the open‚ should be accurate and cover topics of public interest * The aim of public relations by a company often is to persuade the public‚ investors‚ partners

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    In many futuristic novels‚ the protagonist lives in a society whose government is either a utopia or a dystopia. Often‚ a society that appears to be a utopia at the beginning of the novel transforms to a dystopia by the end. It is usually not the government itself that changes‚ but rather the protagonist’s view of the government. As the novel progresses‚ the protagonist begins to realize that the peaceful illusion created by the government masks its true‚ dark nature. Once the protagonist clearly

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    after he becomes self aware of the terrible mindless society that he lives in. Not wanting to just go with the flow Montag decides that he will no longer conform to the status quo of the government‚ nor the dystopian nightmare that he lives in. A dystopia in this case being a time set far off into the future where the government decides to exert power beyond its boundaries in an attempt to help the society‚ but only harm it far more than imaginable. Given the example‚ Fahrenheit

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    Matrix

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    | | | | | | | |BACKGROUND VERIFICATION REPORT - SUPPLEMENTARY | | | | | | | |

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    now: the Kennedy assassination‚ Watergate‚ Vietnam... ~ J.G. Ballard. I refuse to be part of a generation that celebrates the death of communism abroad with the loss of the American dream at home. ~ Bill Clinton. Utopic For other nations‚ utopia is a blessed past never to be recovered; for Americans it is just beyond the horizon. Henry A. Kissinger “Getting a dog has become part of the American dream. It’s part of the package. Part of the happy American life is getting a house‚ a bit

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    Perceptions of Reality in The Matrix Student: Jyl Alampay Student Number: 250431312 Section: 002 Due Date: December 02/09 The question of ‘reality’ has always intrigued people throughout the world. It has been perceived as tangible and exact but at the same time intensely vulnerable. The frailties of ‘reality’ have been exposed by the many differing ways in which it can be perceived. These differences of perception can be attributed to factors such as age‚ sex‚ nationality‚ religion‚ and

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    amongst the people who fear another tribulation. The increased fear in society causes the people of Waknuk to become extreme‚ as they start evicting anything or anyone who is abnormal physically or mentally. Religion is the underlying cause of the dystopia created in the The Chrysalids‚ as the segregation of the mutants negatively affects families‚ kills innocent newborns with deformities‚ and creates a hatred between two groups. Throughout history families have been negatively impacted due to political

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    make on your own? The book "The Giver" is about a world with people who are equal and Jonas‚ the protagonist‚ has something that other’s in the community don’t. The novel "The Giver" is a society that appears to be utopian but is revealed to be dystopia as the story goes on. As a result‚ it is clear to see that the society in the novel has many similarties and differences with our world today. The world we live in and the world they lived in both are controlled by people. In the novel "The Giver"

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