Concepts we live by By Erica Hernandez Metaphors can unite reason and imagination into our everyday language. These metaphors structure our daily thoughts‚ speech‚ and actions. They have even become a way of conceiving information in the thought process of understanding experiences. In Metaphors we live by (1980) by George Lakoff and Mark Johnson the authors describes how often metaphors are kinda of an analogy or symbol‚ that can also be used as a way to relate to other people. Metaphorical
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Divided We Govern Mayhew’s Thesis: “Divided government‚ which the separation of powers produces‚ works as well as unified government that party discipline would create.” First Question: “Even if important laws win enactment just as often under conditions of divided party control‚ might they not be worse than laws? Isn’t “seriously defective legislation” a likelier result?” Mayhew’s Answer: “That is sometimes alleged‚ and if true it would obviously count heavily. Enacting coalitions under divided
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Questions for Close Reading: 1. “We lie. We all do. We exaggerate‚ we minimize‚ we avoid confrontation‚ we spare people’s feelings‚ we conveniently forget‚ we keep secrets‚ we justify lying to the big-guy institutions.” 2. When Stephanie Ericsson went a whole week without telling a single lie‚ she recalled it “paralyzing.” She discovered that telling the truth all the time is “nearly impossible.” 3. A lie is a false action done with the intent to deceive. “Ignoring the
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In the article‚ “We are the Champions” by David Grazian‚ it discusses the reasons why the society tends to focus on particular issues or topics through the functional approach. The article begins with why the society tends to follow professional sport teams by their team uniforms or mascots. This statement allows the reader to expand on their thinking of why we behave in such a manner in the society and why it has been imbedded into everyday life. Through the functional approach‚ the obsession with
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us that we were eating food poison with each bite we take? What would our reactions be? Of course we don’t cook our food in a pan of poison‚ or spice our foods with poison salts. But‚ we do eat poison everyday with some of the foods we eat. We need to start taking a look at the food we are feeding our kids‚ our families‚ and ourselves. Eating this “poison” will have serious health issues later on in life. As a society‚ we all are exposed to the worst kinds of chemicals in the foods we eat.
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I’ve heard of many streets that involved many crimes‚ and the toughest streets of Newark‚ New Jersey is where the three kids in We Beat the Street grew up. The setting of this nonfiction story is just like the real world‚ it brings in normal crimes that would happen today. Some neighborhoods are very wealthy and rich‚ but some are also like the ones in the book. These streets include drug use and gang violence everyday‚ and the three kids had to grow up surviving these exact streets. The book
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Shall We Walk? by Pura Santillan-Castrence This essay was written during the Japanese Occupation but it is as relevant today as it was then. I wrote an article some years ago on the benefits of walking. My automobiled friends praised the article politely enough‚ they liked it (at least they said so); the points were well taken; people should really walk more; it took someone like me to show in such graphic terms what could have been clear to everyone before… then they went on their morning-till-night
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In Coates’ book‚ We Were in Power for Eight Years‚ he explores Obama’s presidency throughout the years while reflecting on his own experiences during Obama’s two terms. Critics of Coates‚ claimed the book lacked crucial facts about Obama’s presidency and the questioned simmered to how should blacks be imagined in politics? Must blacks be obligated to involve themselves in racial‚ international politics‚ or socioeconomic issues? West and Mishra critiques evidently agree blacks should‚ while Kelley
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they are currently. This molding of personality‚ however‚ can have a positive or negative effect on a person. It can permanently form a person’s personality for the rest of their lives. Even though Wes Moore is enrolled in a very sophisticated school‚ that being Riverdale‚ the school could not help Wes Moore in the way that Valley Forge can. The problem with Riverdale does not entirely lie in the school system‚ it lies in the surroundings around the school system. The drug invested streets
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07/18/2014 The Other Wes Moore Can two men with very similar backgrounds grow up to be completely different? Wes Moore takes us on a journey back to his childhood as well as the childhood of a man with the same name. The author Wes describes how the two men‚ grew up just blocks from each other‚ both surrounded with drugs and crime. Wes was a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of John Hopkins‚ army veteran and well renowned speaker around the world teaching people about his story. The other Wes Moore was spending
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