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    Mill S Ethical Theory

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    The Idea of Mill ’s ethical theory is his Greatest Happiness Principle in that “actions are right in proportion as they tend to promote happiness and they are wrong as they tend to produce the reverse of happiness. Happiness is the intended pleasure and the absence of pain. Unhappiness is the pain and the lack of pleasure. Pleasure and freedom from pain are the only desirable things.” Mill ’s view of happiness is hedonistic‚ which suggests that the only good thing in a person is pleasure and the

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    The title of the book is called “Find Her.” The author of the book is Lisa Gardner. The plot is when Flora Dane the main character is kidnapped when shes at a bar all by herself she tries to leave with a man but then the man gets mad at flora and slaps heracross her face another man comes in to save flora he ends up being flora’s kidnapper. The kidnapper puts flora in a box and leaves her for weeks he doesn’t feed her or give her water nor he lets her go to the bathroom‚ so flora ends up peeing in

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    Howard Gardner Outline

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    A Rounded Version: The Theory of Multiple Intelligences I. Introduction A. After giving IQ test to two different children‚ it has been found that later in life the child who has scored higher on the IQ test did very well in school but not in life and the other child did the opposite B. The reason why the test did not prove to be equal to the children’s outcome in life is because the IQ test does not test all kinds of intelligences‚ the multiple intelligences theory accounts for all different types

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    Four psychologists have written essays and constructed theories that can agree that liberal education is of a greater stature than conservatively educated. The essays are "The Theory of Multiple Intelligences‚" written by Howard Gardner‚ "The Personal and Collective Unconscious‚" written by Carl Jung‚ "The Allegory of the Cave‚" written by Plato‚ and "From the Interpretation of Dreams‚" written by Sigmund Freud. In Howard Gardner’s "Theory of Multiple Intelligences" he states that there are seven

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    To begin‚ Psychologist Gardner (2003) and Zigler (2003) contribute some very interesting contributions to the field of psychology. Gardner (2003) made three contributions “He sought to broaden our conceptions of what the human mind is capable of‚ and the mind at its best can accomplish and how the young mind might be better educated”p83. Inevitably‚ turning to psychology" he was surprised to discover that the arts were virtually invisible in most texts”p80. On thy hand Zigler (2003) contributions

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    John Hall S Theory

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    John Hall’s Theory: Violence in Aum Shinrikyo Despite whether these actions have justification are no‚ new religious movements all across the globe have been at some point under scrutiny by those outside their realm of beliefs. Aum Shinrikyo is no exception. It was subject to violence when it suffered attempts to destruction and vengeance. In 1995‚ a Tokyo subway was the hit with a nerve gas attack. It was targeted towards devotees of Aum Shinrikyo‚ who were riding it. With many ways to examine

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    Rawl s Theory of justice

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    Chapter I RAWLS THEORY OF JUSTICE 1.1) Introduction John Rawls‚ a modern and one of the most influential philosophers‚ who held the James Bryant Conant University Professorship at Harvard University and Fulbright Fellowship at Christ Church‚ Oxford‚ published several books and many articles. He wrote a series of highly influential articles in the 1950s and ’60s that helped refocus on morals and political philosophy on substantive problems. He is widely regarded as one of the most important political

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    SUMMARY OF THE CONFLICT THEORY KARL MARX’S VIEW ON CRIME WHAT IS CRIME ?  An action or omission that constitutes an offense that may be prosecuted by the state and is punishable by law.  A crime is an act that breaks a law that relates to how to behave in society. The harm caused by the act is seen to be against society as a whole‚ not just a specific person.   Marxist views on deviance adopt a conflict-structuralist stance. The economic base or infrastructure determines the precise

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    Chomsky’s Theory Chomsky believes that children are born with an inherited ability to learn any of the human languages. He thinks that certain linguistic structures that children use so accurately‚ must have already stuck in their mind. Chomsky believes that every child has a ‘language acquisition device’ or LAD. LAD encodes the major principles of a language and its grammatical structures into the child’s brain. Then the children only have to learn new vocabulary and apply the syntactic structures

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    an individual’s rigorous struggle is something everyone should admire. Giving up has never been an option for Christopher Gardner going from a homeless man with his son living on the streets and on a subway to where he is today; owning a multi-million dollar brokerage in Chicago and New York‚ Chris made up his mind that this is the life he wanted to pursue. Growing up‚ Gardner was taught by his mom that he could become anything he wanted to be if he believed in himself. Despite where he came from

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