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    at the World Trade Center‚ saving many more in his 21 years of service previously. (http://abcnews.go.com/Primetime/story?id=132189&page=1) Stackpole is an example of a hero‚ like many other firemen‚ who risk their lives every day to save others. Thomas Paine‚ one of the most influential heroes of early American Independence‚ can also be recognized as a hero in the past‚ as well as in literature. He wrote Common Sense‚ a pamphlet the is proportionally the best-selling title in all of

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    Sherry Hanna People power and politics Professor Aaron Ibur Thomas Paine “Common Sense” Paine begins the pamphlet “Common Sense” with differentiating between government and society. He argues that society is a “blessing”; on the other hand‚ government is nothing but a “necessary evil.” Society is everything positive that people join together to accomplish. Government‚ on the other hand‚ is only there to protect us from our innate evil. Government has its origins in the evil of man and is therefore

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    creation and use of the scholastic method that had not been seen since the ancient Greeks. Scholasticism was a medieval form of learning that combined login‚ metaphysics and semantics to bring together classical philosophy and Christian theology. Thomas Aquinas was a user of the scholastic method at its height and is best known as the author of the work "Summa Theologica". His work demonstrates the scholastic method by Aquinas’ understanding of philosophy and theology‚ using analysis and logic to

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    enemy is. Instead of having a large‚ intangible enemy like Great Britain‚ Jefferson is able to place the blame on one person which is really useful for the next part of the declaration where he lists the actual grievances. In the form of his argument‚ Thomas Jefferson is able define what an enemy is‚ who he is then he ultimately describes how he is the enemy through the use of repetition. Jefferson’s repeated use of the words “He” and “For” within the bulk of the declaration allow him to explain how the

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    Sydney Walker Thomas Jefferson and the Meanings of Liberty 1. a.) Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson were both representative of their time in the fact that they still held prejudices against different races. This was nothing but the norm for the 18th and 19th century. Jefferson owned slaves and Franklin‚ for most of his life‚ adamantly believed that African Americans were lesser. b.) But‚ quite unlike the mainstream ideals of their time‚ both men held strong ideals of equality. Franklin did

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    The novel Jude the Obscure‚ by Thomas Hardy‚ was first published unabridged in 1896. It narrates the doomed existence of the protagonist‚ Jude‚ from the moment he is still a boy at Marygreen and is inspired by a rural schoolmaster to think of a university education‚ to the moment in which he dies‚ alone and unattended. It tells the story of a man whose dreams and ambitions are gradually destroyed‚ and end up being shattered. Jude lives an enternal cyclical movement‚ in which he never gets any closer

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    George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were two important men who affected our nations independence and the beginning years of our country. They helped form this nation into a free and sovereign country. Yet‚ they were different in many aspects they shared a few common features. Both Washington and Jefferson grew up in the southern state of Virginia and like most owned land to grow and harvest crops. In growing up they came from two different class levels of living. The Jefferson family was

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    secretary to Thomas A. Edison through a recommendation from his employer‚ E.H. Johnson (Columbia University Press‚ 2010). The young secretary worked for the inventor for a decade during which time he played a large role in the creation of several of Edison’s early companies including Edison General Electric Company‚ known today as General Electric Company (Childs I‚ 1932). In the formation of this company‚ Insull was appointed vice-president in charge of manufacturing as a reward by Edison for all of

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    Thomas Aquinas-- in his Treatise on Law‚ Article 3 Question 91-- considers whether or not human laws exist. Law for Aquinas is the essence of God‚ who rules the Universe (624). Human law in particular is “is a dictate of practical reason” (627). Practical reason must be preceded by theoretical reason (627). Theoretical reason moves from intelligibles to the world of scientific objects (627). Practical reason moves the world of natural scientific objects to the world of particular action (627). That

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    All three philosophers had intuitive and differential ideas in the way government should be run‚ while some ideas would benefit the community as a whole‚ others would destroy it and cause chaos. For example‚ Thomas Hobbes‚ as expressed in Leviathan‚ believed an absolute monarchy was the best and only way to govern a country. He believed that this government was the only one that could maintain peace. In Leviathan Hobbes argues that absolute monarchy is the only right form of government and believed

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