POLI 1: Introduction to American Government and Politics Course Syllabus (a.k.a. your most valuable tool in the course) Spring 2014 Sara Callow Office Hours: M from 2-4pm 5021 Email (during the week‚ I commit to a “next day” turnaround time). Messages sent over the weekend or school breaks may not receive a reply until sometime on the first regular school day. callowsara@fhda.edu COURSE OBJECTIVE: As described in the course catalogue‚ this course focuses on a “contemporary analysis
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Centre Number For Examiner’s Use Candidate Number Surname Other Names Examiner’s Initials Candidate Signature Question General Certificate of Education Advanced Subsidiary Examination January 2010 Business Studies Unit 2 Mark 1 2 BUSS2 TOTAL Managing a Business Thursday 21 January 2010 1.30 pm to 3.00 pm For this paper you must have: a calculator. Time allowed 1 hour 30 minutes Instructions Use black ink or black ball-point pen. Fill in the
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Conceiving a Child for the Wrong Purposes It is wrong to conceive a child for the purposes of saving another. There are cases in which parents only conceive a child to save the life of another. It is unfair to the child conceived because it was not made out of love. The child was conceived for instrumental reasons. In a case presentation called “A Birth to Save a Life” there are several focal points that discussed the arguments of conceiving a child for the wrong purposes. The movie My
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Hume and Locke’s conflicting views on the existence of personal identity stem from a fundamental disagreement in regard to memory. According to Hume we have an impermanent personal identity as a result of our constantly changing stream of perceptions. These mental experiences are usually triggered by impressions‚ or perceptions that involve a sense experience. These constantly changing streams of perception form the false identity. On the other hand John Locke proposes this concept that says X
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t is plugged into the brain. The brain then processes these impulses where they are transformed into an image in our mind. What our minds experience is an image of the outside world similar to how a television projects an image captured by a television camera. In Putnam’s thought experiment‚ you imagine that your brain has been severed from the nerves connecting it to your senses (eyes‚ ears‚ nose‚ etc.) and has been removed from you skull and placed in a vat filled with the nutritional fluid
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Philosophy130 Eggnonian Economic Justice I am a member of the country of Begonia’s Grand Council on Ethics. The council has been given charge of deciding whether or not our country of Eggnonia is morally obligated to send famine relief to the neighboring country of Furesia. As you all know in centuries past‚ both countries had thriving economies that were based on the frazzle. I am sure you all know this animal very well. The problem is that
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Many people believe that leadership is simply being the first‚ biggest or most powerful. Leadership in organizations has a different and more meaningful definition. A leader is someone who sets direction in an effort or task and influences or motivates people to follow that direction. The power point presentation explains leadership is the influence that particular individuals exert on the goal achievement of others in an organizational context. When some think of leadership the idea of the military
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Philosophy of Education - HISTORICAL OVERVIEW‚ CURRENT TRENDS philosophical philosophers field educational Search All U.S. Universities HISTORICAL OVERVIEW William K. Frankena CURRENT TRENDS Nicholas C. Burbules Nathan Raybeck HISTORICAL OVERVIEW The word education is used sometimes to signify the activity‚ process‚ or enterprise of educating or being educated and sometimes to signify the discipline or field of study taught in schools of education that concerns itself with this activity
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BIRNBAUM‚ ROBERT. 1988. How Colleges Work: The Cybernetics of Academic Organization and Leadership. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. BOLMAN‚ LEE G.‚ and DEAL‚ TERRENCE E. 1997. Reframing Organizations: Artistry‚ Choice‚ and Leadership‚ 2nd edition. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. ETZIONI‚ AMITAI. 1964. Modern Organizations. Englewood Cliffs‚ NJ: Prentice-Hall. FISHER‚ JAMES L.‚ and KOCH‚ JAMES V. 1996. Presidential Leadership. Phoenix‚ AZ: ACE/Oryx Press. GIEGER‚ ROGER. 1986. The Growth of American Research Universities
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What Is Leadership? Leadership The ability to influence a group toward the achievement of goals. Management Use of authority inherent in designated formal rank to obtain compliance from organizational members. 11–0 Trait Theories Traits Theories of Leadership Leadership Traits: • Ambition and energy • The desire to lead • Honest and integrity Theories that consider personality‚ social‚ physical‚ or intellectual traits to differentiate leaders from nonleaders. • Self-confidence
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