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    “The House on Mango Street” by Sandra Cisneros is series of vignettes put together to create one remarkable novel. The story unfolds from the perspective of Esperanza Cordero‚ a young Latina girl growing up in inner-city Chicago. The plot is loosely based on the author’s childhood. The setting of the novel‚ Mango Street‚ is important to the work’s themes of social classes‚ self-identity‚ and gender roles. Social class is very important to the narrator. Esperanza is ashamed of where she lives and

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    Color Blindness

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    Color blindness or color vision deficiency is the inability or decreased ability to see color‚ or distinguish color differences‚ under normal lighting conditions. Color blindness affects many people in a population. "Color blind" is a term of art; there is no actual blindness but there is a fault in the development of one or more sets of retinal cones that perceive color in light and transmit that inform ation to the optic nerve. Symptoms like those of color blindness can also be produced by physical

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    Inattentinal Blindness

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    INATTENTIONAL BLINDNESS Inattentional blindness‚ also known as perceptual blindness‚ is the phenomenon of not being able to see things that are actually there. This can be a result of having no internal frame of reference to perceive the unseen objects‚ or it can be the result of the mental focus or attention which cause mental distractions. The phenomenon is due to how our minds see and process information. Closely related to the subject of change blindness‚ it is an observed phenomenon of the

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    Inattentional Blindness

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    trial‚ they added a small square placed close to both lines. After the trial‚ subjects were asked if they had noticed anything unusual within the trial‚ with only ten percent of the subjects reporting that they noticed the square. Inattentional blindness occurs most often when the subjects are focused on something else‚ such as the lines on the cross mentioned

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    river blindness

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    the people who are affected by river blindness. I believe many pharmaceutical in the area that river blindness occurs will invest in the cure for river blindness. 3. However‚ Merck could not justify such an investment in terms of financial at all‚ because this development is a big financial risk. Merck works for a company that is committed to the people‚ so they take risk to better the people. This is the main reason they would create a cure for river blindness 4. Merck could tell them that the cost

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    Color Blindness

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    Color Blindness: Explanation Of Disease: · Color blindness is often the result of a genetic deficiency‚ but can also result from eye‚ nerve or brain damage‚ or exposure to certain chemicals. Being color blind means individuals have an inability to distinguish between some of the colors that others can see differently. Color blindness can be present from birth‚ or it may develop at a later stage in life. It can also be stationary or progressive. Normal color vision requires the use of specialized

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    Othello: Blindness

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    Could one ordinary woman be more intelligent than several highly skilled male warriors? In William Shakespeare’s Othello‚ although Emilia plays a small role‚ she makes a powerful impact. Her omnipotent bravado brings us to the conclusion that she is the reincarnation of Esther from the Bible and that she is a mirror image of today’s risk taking woman. Emilia’s insight brings perspective to not only what is righteous but also to the darkness of bestiality portrayed throughout the play. Although

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    Colour Blindness

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    Colour blindness is a very well known deficiency that affects approximately 8% of the population worldwide (Fluck 2006). People who are colour blind are not technically blind‚ they have a decreased ability to identify colours and in the most extreme cases‚ not able to see colours at all. The technical term for being colour blind is achromatopsia which means the inability to see any colours at all. However‚ most people are only colour deficient and not fully color blind therefore they can be classified

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    Ethical Blindness

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    Ethical Blindness Guido Palazzo • Franciska Krings • Ulrich Hoffrage Received: 1 June 2010 / Accepted: 22 November 2011 Ó Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2011 Abstract Many models of (un)ethical decision making assume that people decide rationally and are in principle able to evaluate their decisions from a moral point of view. However‚ people might behave unethically without being aware of it. They are ethically blind. Adopting a sensemaking approach‚ we argue that ethical blindness results

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    Sight or Blindness?

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    10th Grade‚ English Sight or Blindness? Throughout the play‚ Oedipus Rex‚ Sophocles makes several references about sight and blindness. Even though Tiresias is a blind man‚ he is the one that knows the truth and is insinuating that Oedipus doesn’t want to face it. Oedipus develops into a character blinded by all the greatness that Thebes has given him. The oracle prophesized by the gods is the main reason that led him to become the tragic hero of this play. First and foremost‚ Sophocles’

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