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    landowners trying to steal land‚ and a young girl infatuated with him and getting rid of his innocent wife. As the lead character‚ Proctor embodies a being that exhibits heroic qualities‚ temptation towards evil‚ and confrontation of evil in society. The ideal hero‚ according to Aristotle‚ is someone who is able to see

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    mood-enhancement‚ as it optimally raises my dopamine‚ norepinephrine‚ and epinephrine levels with no negative effects besides a little weight gain that is easily avoided by the addition of exercise. From an evolutionary stand point‚ bacon is the ideal food. Back in the day‚ before there were nutritionists and people ate to survive‚ cravings were responsible for encouraging the right balance of carbs to fats to proteins as well as the consumption of all necessary vitamins and minerals. Protein‚ which

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    The Wife of Bath is the Perfect Character to Tell a Tale about Sovereignty Geoffrey Chaucer‚ the writer of The Canterbury Tales‚ weaves relatable stories‚ ordinary and extraordinary characters‚ and timeless lessons‚ to create this tale. The Canterbury Tales is based around a group of people who are on a pilgrimage to the shrine of Thomas Becket. One of these characters that Chaucer focuses on is the Wife of Bath. She is described as a worldly woman who has been around. The Wife of Bath has been

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    My Ideal Life Partner

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    “My ideal partner will be someone who is confident‚ someone who believes in family values and understands the importance of family. Who has the spirit to take up challenges and overcome them”. “Understanding between each other and taking care of each other is key to Happy Marriage‚ My Life Partner should have is love n caring nature”. “Who is more responsible enough and who can hold me in his Loving and Caring hands. I feel where there is Trust and Understanding there will be the divine existence

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    all about the human experience and how man rises above the rest or Secularism where you are simply straying from the church‚ these men followed their beliefs and put them in art. The Humanism view of man in art can best be displayed in the three ideals of the human body‚ emotion‚ and achievement. The idea that man and not God was the one with the ability to decide his own fate was a revolutionary idea to the time and it was taken with full faith by the strongest minds. The presentation of art with

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    language and not in a movie’s ability to go on location or add cinematic frills. In opening up Oscar Wilde’s 1895 comic masterpiece‚ ’’The Importance of Being Earnest‚’’ the director Oliver Parker‚ whose more straightforward adaptation of Wilde’s ’’Ideal Husband’’ three years ago found an agreeable balance between period lushness and linguistic precision‚ has gone overboard. What would Wilde have made of the embellishments Mr. Parker has tacked onto the play like a reckless dressmaker tarting up a

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    Explain what is meant by the ideal pupil In classrooms‚ many teachers labelled and classified certain students to their ethical and academic backgrounds. Becker concluded the common image of the ‘ideal pupil’ as being intelligent‚ well behaved‚ motivated and usually from a middle class background. Suggest three reasons why students from the upper social classes and those who have attended independent schools are more likely to gain places at elite universities such as LSE and Oxbridge even when

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    Theory

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    in the 18th century and continuing into the 19th century work has become regular paid employment. The simple rural lives were exchanged by mass production of goods. Industrialisation led to urbanisation‚ it changed the medieval customs‚ beliefs and ideals. The term ‘industrial revolution’ is used to describe this transformation. Industrial Productive activity involved Factory systems and mechanisation powered by energy sources that is undertaken outside the home in a building or factory‚ Where workers

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    On Theory

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    think‚ accurately— summarizes recent efforts to do just that.1 These entail the identification of and subsequent assault on something called “the critical” or “critical architecture‚” usually accompanied by a collateral assault on something called “theory.” At the risk of erecting yet another straw figure that tramples on the subtleties of Baird’s analysis‚ it might be fair to characterize such practices‚ variously named “post-critical” or “projective‚” as sharing a commitment to an affect-driven‚ nonoppositional

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    Explain the concept of Ideals in Plato’s writings “The unexamined life is not worth living” according to Plato. He argued that we should always pursue knowledge and ask questions to do this. A key part of Plato’s philosophy is epistemology – his theory of how we know things. His concept of Ideals‚ also known as Forms‚ is Plato’s explanation of how true knowledge can be sought. Plato understood that there are concepts that we can all recognise in various things‚ for example the concept of

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