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    example‚ two pieces of literature‚ The Declaration of Independence‚ written by Thomas Jefferson‚ and A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift. Which one has had more of an influence on society? The obvious answer is The Declaration of Independence‚ because it is what we now live our lives by and changed an entire nation. Let’s take a closer look at why I believe the Declaration of Independence is a much better essay. Was it that Thomas Jefferson was more intelligent‚ or respected as an author? Was it the fact

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    In his essay “The World is Flat”‚ Thomas L. Friedman reckons with the belief of flattening world he realizes in the journey to India. Friedman notes that Columbus’s sea exploration shortened the distance for Spanish monarchy to grow its wealth and power out of the "source of [India’s] untold riches" (633)‚ and discovered "the world was indeed round" (664). Columbus found the hardware source of India’s riches which is the free slavery labor and natural resources‚ and yet Friedman found the software

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    The objective of communication is to obtain a close rapport between interlocutors. If the goal is reached‚ it is easier to tackle with the encountered problem. This is the way how Thomas Gordon‚ the author of the bestseller “Parent Effectiveness Training” (1970‚ New York)‚ perceives the role of good listening. In order to focus readers’ attention on fundamental mistakes people make‚ he listed twelve common types of ineffective responses. These are so called “Twelve Roadblocks to Effective Communication”

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    Thomas Hardy’s The Mayor of Casterbridge As an Aristotelian Tragedy Thomas Hardy incorporates many elements of the classical Aristotlean tragedy in his novel The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886). In an Aristotelian tragedy‚ the most important element is the experience of catharsis‚ the arousing of pity and fear in the audience. The effect of catharsis on the audience depends on the unity of the plot and the effective presence of a tragic hero. The plot in an Aristotelian tragedy consists of the reversal

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    Aquinas: Language and God At the beginning of class this week‚ we reviewed the Five Ways of St. Thomas Aquinas‚ focusing especially on the fourth way‚ which involves degrees of perfection. Since it was discussed previously‚ I only took a few notes regarding things that had not been touched on before. Basically‚ no one can live in a way which denies degrees of perfection. There must be an objective gradation system in order to even simply say that one thing is colder then another. Something must

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    Critical analysis of Thomas Hardy’s novel Tess of the D’Urbervilles. Thomas Hardy is on of the brightest representatives of English realism at the end of 19th and the beginning of 20th century. At that time‚ a new stage in the development of the English literature began‚ characterized with the conflict between the supporters of realism and the new modernist artistic directions. He learned from his predecessors to raise important and interesting problems‚ to tell interesting stories ‚ to portray

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    Thomas Hobbes was a seventeenth century English philosopher who questioned the extend of acceptable revolution. Hobbs claimed himself to be a ‘revolutionary’ thinker‚ and believed he had the secret to a perfect government. (Williams) Because Hobbes was a gentle man‚ and hated all violence and war‚ he viewed violent protests as absurd. Hobbes believed humans naturally were not social or political‚ but cunning‚ malicious‚ and bound to fight. Therefore‚ he believed it necessary for humanity to create

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    References: Hardy‚ Thomas (1891) Tess of the D ’Urbervilles. London: Penguin Books Ltd (2003). Higonnet‚ Margaret (1998) Introduction in Hardy ’s Tess of the D ’Urbervilles (1891). London: Penguin Books Ltd (2003). Sayer‚ Karen (1998) York Notes: Tess of the D ’Urbervilles. London: York Press. The Victorian Web (2002). Thomas Hardy. Victorianweb.org/authors/hardy/html.

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    "Far from the Madding Crowd Thomas Hardy The following is a summary of critical viewpoints on Hardy’s Far from the Madding Crowd. See also Thomas Hardy Literary Criticism‚ Thomas Hardy Short Story Criticism‚ and Jude the Obscure Criticism. INTRODUCTION Long considered one of England’s foremost nineteenth-century novelists‚ Hardy established his reputation with the publication of Far from the Madding Crowd in 1874. It was the first of his so-called “Wessex novels‚” set in a fictitious English

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    Since the dawn of man people have dreamed of the ideal society. A vision that speaks to the hopes of mankind. Numerous men and women have written about their ideal world; Plato when writing his Republic‚ Thomas Moore in his Utopia‚ and Edward Bellamy in Looking Backwards are just a few examples of perfect worlds that have been dreamed by man. Humans are naturally curious beings with an uncanny desire to explore and create. We are each‚ in a sense‚ pioneers that are sent to explore the vastness of

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