"What are the comparisons between machiavelli and martin luther king namely the prince and letter from birmingham jail" Essays and Research Papers

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    Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Niccolo Machiavelli were two important leaders and philosophers from two different time periods. Martin Luther King was a strong and respected leader who preached against segregation and racism during the civil rights era. Niccolo Machiavelli was an Italian diplomat and political philosopher known for his political views and writings. Though King and Machiavelli were known as philosophers‚ their views on certain topics could not be more different. Machiavelli believed

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    on the front line leading the battle‚ Dr. Martin Luther King‚ Jr. King‚ though extremely passionate about his cause‚ was non-violent in his approach to attaining his objectives of justifying his cause‚ demonstrating the trials of African Americans in America‚ and arguing that immediate action is paramount. While in a

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    "Letter from a Birmingham Jail [King‚ Jr.]" 16 April 1963 My Dear Fellow Clergymen: While confined here in the Birmingham city jail‚ I came across your recent statement calling my present activities "unwise and untimely." Seldom do I pause to answer criticism of my work and ideas. If I sought to answer all the criticisms that cross my desk‚ my secretaries would have little time for anything other than such correspondence in the course of the day‚ and I would have no time for constructive work

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    Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s letter glances into the actuality of racial segregation in the 1960s. King writes this letter to the clergy men and intends to address the concerns regarding the wisdom and timing of the nonviolent demonstrations in Birmingham‚ Alabama that King and other leaders arranged and carried out in 1963. King employs all three types of appeals‚ pathos‚ ethos and logos in this letter to the clergy man. Dr. King’s letter brings out feelings of empathy‚ indignation‚ and

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    After the Birmingham‚ Alabama newspaper published "The Public Statement by Eight Alabama Clergymen" calling Martin Luther King Jr.’s activities "unwise and untimely‚" King wrote a response back from jail arguing each point the clergymen had made in their "Public Statement." In the "Letter from Birmingham Jail‚" King points out that he is not an outsider since the people of Birmingham invited him and that since they are all within the United States‚ nobody should be even considered an outsider.

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    Dr. Martin Luther King was an equal rights activist whose efforts ended the demand for equality among the people of our nation. Dr. King wrote an open letter titled‚ “Letter from Birmingham Jail” while in jail on April of 1963‚ when segregation was at its greatest in Birmingham‚ Alabama. The letter was a reply directed to several white‚ moderate‚ clergymen who had written an open letter criticizing his actions during the civil rights movement. The increased violence and social injustice caused an

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    Almost sixty years ago from today‚ while incarcerated in Birmingham City Jail‚ the famous Martin Luther King Jr. composed a letter intended for a group of clergymen in the area. The lengthy letter‚ widely known as the “Letter from Birmingham Jail”‚ was written in response to a brief‚ but rather bold criticism of King and his fellow civil rights activists. Although the uninformed clergymen had good intentions of “keeping the peace‚” King sought to shed light on the superficial critique of the civil

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    In 1963‚ strong opinions on black civil rights were being brought forth in Birmingham‚ Alabama and other southern states. Some of those strong opinions was from 8 clergymen‚ who spoke out against King and his ideas on desegregation and equality for all. King felt the need to defend his ideas of the men he thought were supportive of the civil rights cause. In King’s “Letter from a Birmingham Jail”‚ he uses rhetorical strategies such as appeals to ethos‚ logos‚ and pathos‚ as well as diction‚ syntax

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    normally acceptable or because it’s just the law. I believe that King wrote the Letter from Birmingham Jail to make his readers question and interpret whether or not a law is just. In this essay I will make the distinction between just and unjust laws according to Martin Luther King Jr’ s Letter from Birmingham Jail. If a law is unjust‚ it is the responsibility of the people to get it overturned. A society should not live with an unjust law. King addresses the church’s failure to step into the breach and

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    Martin Luther King Jr was an incredible person‚ leader and writer; he fought for what is right‚ racial equality. During one of his protest in Birmingham Alabama he was arrested for parading without a permit‚ it was during that time he spent in jail that he used the technique of writing in form of a rhetorical triangle. The rhetorical triangle was created by Aristotle in 4th century BCE it consist of logos which is logic‚ pathos which is emotion‚ and ethos which is ethics. King uses this technique

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