"Rachel carson the obligation to endure" Essays and Research Papers

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    say‚ environmentalist Rachel Carson sought to get behind the mystery that was pesticide use in America. She saw through the chemical companies’ lies‚ and with the use of her book‚ strove to end their deathly practices. Silent Spring voiced her opinion over the catastrophic consequences of this chemical abuse and could be considered the prime factor that led to the ignition of regulation programs‚ such as the Environmental Protection Agency. In her infamous publication‚ Carson questions the harmful

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    The Obligation to Endure is the second chapter from the book Silent Spring by Rachel Carson. Carson presents the persuasive argument that pesticides such as DDT should be kept away from our homes‚ our place of business‚ and our children. In the 1950s and 60s DDT was a very popular pesticide that was commonly used. The hazardous effects were unknown. Carson expresses her founded concerns about the adverse risks and toxicity associated with these pesticides using logical‚ emotional‚ and ethical

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    Nature throughout history has been personified with themes of freedom‚ hope‚ innocence‚ and simplistic beauty. Nature is pure but home to such complexity‚ within ecosystems and the creatures that live in it. The importance and love for nature has declined as we face modernization and turn to technology before we consider nature. The precedence placed on nature that generations before us possessed has been replaced with social media‚ and the ability to have most of the world at our fingertips. The

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    The book‚ Silent Spring‚ by Rachel Carson is regarded as the most significant environmental novel as it was the start of the environmental movement. This book highlights the human poisoning of the biosphere through chemicals aimed at pests and disease control‚ particularly dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT). DDT pesticides were particularly harmful because as they entered the biosphere‚ they not only killed the bugs but also entered the food chain. DDT accumulated in the fatty tissues of animals

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    meet Rachel Carson and their face would fall off of how pretty Rachel Carson was. At the age of 48 she adopted a kid it was a boy about 11 or 10 years of age. Rachel Carson is working and finishing a book that she wrote called Silent Spring. Then Rachel Carson quit her job and just studied science and sea creatures. There was a cure to save this bug disease it was called D.D.T. Then that same bug disease went to the war and that is like how the other people won their wars. Rachel Carson got two

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    Rachel Carsons central argument of this passage deals with focusing on the negative factors "Parathion" can produce. She uses rhetorical devices such as ethos‚ rhetorical questions‚ and visual imagery all to persuade the reader that Parathion is harmful. The first part of the passage uses ethos to appeal to authority. Carson states‚ "The Fish and Wildlife service haas found it necessary to express serious concern over this trend‚ pointing out that parathion treated areas constitute a potential hazard

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    Rachel Carson was born on May 27‚ 1907 in Springdale‚ Pennsylvania. She grew up with abig appreciation for nature because her mom liked nature. She got a degree in Biology fromPennsylvania College for Women and a degree in Zoology from Johns Hopkins University. Sheworked for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. She was known as a very good nature writer andwrote a lot of books about the living world and the ocean. She died in 1964 after a long fightwith breast cancer.In 1947‚ Time Magazine said that

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    Rachel Carson’s “Silent Spring” Silent Spring is widely accepted as helping start the American environmental movement in 1972. Rachel Carson was a well-known author on natural history when Silent Spring was published. The book spearheaded environmental concern and no book since has had the same impact. It begins with a story about a quaint and charming little farm town in pristine Anywhere‚ mid-America and describes wildlife and all the beautiful colors on the countryside. Many people come to

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    for everything was the use of chemicals to eradicate or to reduce the expanding range of these organism without considering the true impact of such indiscriminate application of pesticides or herbicides or as Rachel Carson named as “Biocides” (Carson‚ 1962). The book written by Rachel Carson “Silent Springs” was very controversial then and now‚ because the same forces that dominated the use of these dangerous chemicals are present today but under different names and chemicals composition.

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    that we are being asked to take senseless and frightening risks‚ then we should no longer accept the counsel of those who tells us that we must fill our world with poisonous chemicals; we should look about and see what other course is open to us" (Carson‚ Silent Spring). Pesticides were introduced into the natural world near the middle of the 20th century as a means of allowing crops to develop resistance to disease and insect infestation‚ thus allowing vegetation to grow more effectively. Initially

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