Sunday, January 19, 2020

Game and Dynamically Generated World

Minecraft: A World at Your Mercy By If you're one of those people who quite likes computer games, but finds the endless mayhem and slaughter a bit unseemly, there is another option: putting imaginary things on top of other imaginary things. There are no scores, no obvious goals to aim for, no point at which you can punch the air and say that you've triumphed; you simply move around a randomly and dynamically generated world, collecting objects and building things. All at your leisure.Does that sound sufficiently exciting? Well, Minecraft allows you to do just that; it may have been billed as the â€Å"coolest game you've never heard of†, says Senior Emily Marchese, but it has about as much in common with Call Of Duty or Angry Birds as hopscotch or basket weaving. It's created by Markus â€Å"Notch† Persson, developed by a very small team, but has had more than 12 million people buy the 20 dollar game. But what exactly do you accomplish playing Minecraft?Head over to You Tube, where home-produced videos of Minecraft creations litter the top 10 most popular videos each month, and you'll find such delights as a 1:1 scale model of the USS Enterprise, roller-coasters, reconstructions of the Titanic and much else. FHS Alumni, Soham Roy gives us a few examples of what he thinks are his greatest accomplishments in Minecraft: â€Å"I have created a pyramid out of water, pushed Haroon Ahmad into a pit of lava, and tamed a gigantic pack of wolves to rip into the flesh of my enemi†¦I mean, to cuddle and play fetch. † How you make these structures is much like how you make things in real life. You need tools and resources. You use the wood from trees to make tools and then you mine underground and start looking through caves for resources. As you go deeper you’ll find rarer resources which you can upgrade your tools with or make structures with. And when you have the resources you need, like Legos, you start putting them all together and star t making anything your heart desires.You can also set up servers and create a massive world with your friends. Junior, Mike Salzarulo is one of the many students to own a minecraft server here at Freedom. â€Å"You can do anything you want. If you wanna be a nomad and travel the world you can do that. You can be like me and just set up camp and make a town with all your friends. I made a huge castle with them. † The comparisons with Lego have provoked a debate over whether Minecraft is even a game at all; maybe it should be considered more as a lowly â€Å"toy†?But when the sun sets over your Minecraft world every hour or so and darkness creeps in, monsters (or â€Å"mobs†) emerge – and if you're not tucked up safely within your construction – your game may well be swiftly curtailed. The different types of mobs include spiders, zombies, and skeletons that are equipped with bows. The two most infamous mobs in the game are the endermen and the creepe rs. The endermen are passive and non-hostile and sometimes cute creatures that only attack you if you look directly at them.And finally, the creepers are the most feared of all Minecraft mobs, because if you get too close they make a hissing sound and then explode. The explosion decimates everything around you. So be careful when you look out the window of your house made out of diamond, a creeper might be trying to creep on you. Minecraft is still being made and the full version will be out in November, but will then cost $30. If you buy the game now, not only will you be able save $10, but you’ll also be able to get your hands on the game that has everyone either sitting on their computer all day or designing buildings on graph paper.

Saturday, January 11, 2020

An Essay

Even though Romans is not a complete worldview r a Christian worldview it certainly directs us in the right way of how we should view the world. What does Romans inform us regarding Creation When we look at Romans chapter 8: 19-25, believe here Paul is talking about Adam and Jesus. Everybody thinks that God knows everything going to happen, and the truth is I believe he knows. The one thing I really believe that God knows everything, but he does give us free choice and maybe just one time he's hoping he doesn't know that were going to, and maybe instead of choosing the wrong we would choose Him.The curse is Adam when he first mined not just for his self but also for every birth from then on. Jesus then comes as the sacrificial sheep. One man to curse all of mankind and one man to save all Of mankind. Natural Creation There is no doubt about finding God's creation in Romans. In chapter 1:20-21 proves of his existence and power, verse 20 states that since the creation of the world God' s invisible quality -his eternal power and divine nature. God has no doubt that this is his creation and God is always made himself available to us. God created verse man and woman to have a natural relationship, which man and woman.Man started to make idols out of gold, of birds and animals and reptiles. Man's heart was not in the right place for the creator it was for sinful lust, since their heart was not right with God and instead had all this unnatural lusts God let it happen. Men started having sex with men and even their women was having sex with other women. Their acts were unnatural from one God one God wanted of the most one man one woman until the end of time. Sins in Roman Sin is mention several times in Romans, Paul tells us that we all have sin and we all fall short of the glory of God.Paul also explained to us that through the away no one will be saved, but the law lets us recognize what sin is. 6:23 tells us that that the punishment for sin is death. Whereas if we el ect to serve Jesus, we are promised eternal life. This is a condition that cannot be fixed by any man, that only Jesus dying on the cross for us was the only way we as mortal humans and sinful by nature could be saved. Salvation In Romans Paul talked to us about salvation and the only way that we could ever be saved with salvation was through Jesus dying on the cross for us.We know that Jesus was a descendent of David, and the one thing that he as supposed to do was to be the sacrificial sheep for our sins. So without Jesus we would never found salvation because we were not covered under the first covenant, but under the new covenant we were accepted because Jesus gave his life for us. So this was the nature and mission of Jesus Christ and justification by faith is believing and Jesus the son of God. Because of our faith and our believe Christ the moment that we accepted Jesus we were given the Holy Spirit which would sanctify us and give us empowerment to do the things that Jesus d id himself.Eschatology In Romans 5:20 we see were Paul is saying that because of the law being added was so that basically trespasses might increase. You would think of Paul is against on is that we have no hope, but he is also that were sin increases grace will increase also. God has new mercies for us every day in new Hope always be there no matter what we've done we can go and repented God because Jesus made a way for us to live that one day we may have eternal life. When we look at Romans 8:18-25 Paul is telling us that we should not compare are suffering to the glory that will be ours when the time moms.The glory Will be greater than any suffering we have ever been subject to. Romans 13:11-14 Paul is telling us that our Christian worldview and the obedience that we have Jesus through our faith one day we will be victorious against Satan, death and sin Ethics In Romans 8:8-21 we will find that Paul bases the ethics on love. In verse eight Paul is telling us that no matter what w e do we need to do it cheerfully, delicately and we need to show mercy follows is all up in nine telling us that love must be since. That anything evil we should hate, we should cling to what is good.And the next versus is instructed how we should, and we should never commit adultery we should always respect with love. Chapter 8 sums up the things that we should do we love and not be afraid to do them. Theology There are several verses in here were Paul talks about God even though his letter is non-about God its more about justification. When we look at 1:17 here Paul is trying to tell us that there is a righteousness that is revealed from God. Paul states it is from first to last the righteousness will live by faith.

Friday, January 3, 2020

A Brief Note On The American Civil War - 920 Words

One consequence of the American Civil war is that it was the largest catastrophe in American history. â€Å"Approximately one in four soldiers that went to war never returned home.† There weren’t any cemeteries, burial details or messengers of loss. The army didn’t have the mechanisms needed to handle the amount of deaths the nation was gonna experience. It was the bloodiest conflict and there had been an unprecedented violence of battles such as Gettysburg, Shiloh and Antietam. â€Å"The Civil war was America’s costliest war, with 623,000 dead, with approximately 33,000 from Pennsylvania.† The wounded individuals were amputees that struggled to overcome the perceptions of disabled as less than members of society. There was a lot of diseases during the civil war. â€Å"The worst out the bunch was by far Dysentery.† It had gotten around 45,00 deaths in the union army and 50,000 in the Confederate army. Contaminated water had caused the diseas e. In those days, hygiene wasn’t a big issue. Another major killer was typhoid. This was also a result of contaminated water or food. It had killed 30,000 confederate and 35,00 union troops. Another consequence during the civil war was the economy. â€Å"Of all the disadvantages the Confederacy experienced during the Civil War, its lack of a sound currency was particularly damaging.† There was limited resources available with more than $1 million in hard currency or specie which the confederacy relied mainly on for printed money. It went down rapidly inShow MoreRelatedA Brief Note On The American Civil War1540 Words   |  7 Pages The American Civil War is the bloodiest war in American history, claiming the lives of 720,00 solider and an indeterminable number of civilians. But these four years were a larger battle for survival against a third unseen enemy: disease. A battle that took two out of three soldiers from disease; most commonly pneumonia, dysentery, typhoid, tuberculosis, smallpox and malaria. 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According to Levine, tension arose due to conflicting interests in the depths of the free-labor based economy of the North and the slave-labor based economy of the South which boiled up to a point that led the newly formed nation to a civil war. Levine starts off by giving a brief history of slavery and shifts to discussing the way in which it revolutionized the economy of America, and the role that it conveyed in the conflicts leading up to the Civil War. Slavery was crucialRead More Dorothea Dix Essay946 Words   |  4 PagesDix’s beliefs in to context. One of the links is to Notable American Unitarians and further directs the reader to biographies for people such as Frank Lloyd Wright, Linus Pauling, Adlai Stevenson, e.e. cummings and Pete Seeger. nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;http://www.ana.org/hof/dixxdl.htm. This website for the American Nursing Association gives a very brief overview of Dix, relating to her induction into the ANA Hall of Fame in 1976. It notes that although she had no formal nursing training, she wasRead MorePresident Abraham Lincoln Delivered One Of The Most Famous Speeches1698 Words   |  7 PagesNovember 19, 1863 was the day when at the time President Abraham Lincoln delivered one of the most famous speeches in the American History. Lincolns brief but was powerful, Gettysburg Address described the United States as being a pivotal crossroads. While Lincoln credited with creating the â€Å"Government of the People, by the people,† it was really for the older countries. A while after Lincoln was invited to make a few remarks at a ceremony consecrating a new cemetery for the Union Soldiers. That

Wednesday, December 25, 2019

Counselor Ethics And Responsibilities Of Counseling

Running head: COUNSELOR ETHICS AND RESPONSIBILITIES 1 10 COUNSELOR ETHICS AND RESPONSIBILITIES Counselor Ethics and Responsibilities Thomas J. McCarthy Grand Canyon University: PCN-505 March 2, 2016 Counselor Ethics and Responsibilities There are four ?Ds? of legal and ethical practice: Do I have a Duty to do something? Am I Derelict in fulfilling that duty? Were there any Damages (harm) done? And can what I did be Directly connected to the damages? (Ethics In Counseling: A Complex Issue, 2012) Do I have a Duty to do something? In counseling, I believe we all have a Duty, but, sometimes, depending on the issue, the question becomes who do I have a Duty to ? myself, my God, or the client? This ?D? and the other ?D?s will be discussed forthcoming in the issue I have chosen to discuss. Section 1: Counselor Values 1a) Abortion. When a lot of pro-life proponents are asked to discuss their views on abortion they say that they are against all forms of abortion in all cases EXCEPT in cases of rape and incest. That is not pro-life, that is pro-choice because one is choosing which case to allow abortion and which to not allow. I believe that abortion in all forms, in all cases, should not be allowed. So why do I say this in this rape case? Surely, the victim of rape is not at fault for getting pregnant. It was forced on her. But, also you have to remember that the baby is not at fault also. You can?t sentence the child for the crime of the father.Show MoreRelatedEthical Case Study Of The Case Of James A 25 Years Old Caucasian Female Intern1539 Words   |  7 PagesEthical Case Study Analysis Paper In the case study of James a 25 years old Caucasian male intern counseling student, who is interning with the college counseling center at a local university, James have nine months left upon graduation; he admits to having no clinical experience and no experience working with diversity groups. During James internship arrival he recognized a familiar face that was identified as his ex-friend who he has not seen in years and she is the clinical supervisor for theRead MoreLiberty Coun 501 Ethics Comparison1591 Words   |  7 PagesEthics Codes Comparison Paper H Michele Wallach Liberty University Online Abstract These publications regarding ethics, American Counseling Association: Code of Ethics (2005) and the American Association of Christian Counseling: Code of Ethics (2004), are available as a reference for use. The purpose of this paper is to compare general and specific elements of the two publications. 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There will be at least four of the nine sections of the ACA Code of Ethics that will be covered within the context of this case. In consideration of each of these ethical breaches there will be dialog on the nature of the ethical issue or violation, where the ACA ethical code applies, ramifications of the ethical issue or violation of both parties, and withRead MorePastoral Counselors Essay886 Words   |  4 PagesPRINCIPLE A: COMPETENCE Counselors, Pastoral care givers, and help givers should acquire the requisite education, which will equip them to practice the profession of their calling. Counselors should take on clients who fall within the area of their competence- areas in which they have acquired qualifying training techniques, experience and education; otherwise the case should be referred to other competent professionals. Counselors/helpers should seek to maintain competence by assessing and makingRead MoreThe Ethics Of Confidentiality From Oklahoma s State Regulation1644 Words   |  7 PagesTo demonstrate these outcomes, the ethics of confidentiality will be examined from Oklahoma’s state regulation (2010) and the ACA Code of Ethics (2014). The various dilemmas and the awareness of both personal/professional competencies (both lacking and achieving) are exemplified in these ethical codes and regulations. The subtle/overt nuances of varying worldviews and cultural applications of confidentiality wil l be gleaned from these standards. The responsibility to teach confidentiality to thoseRead MoreEthical Codes And Guidelines Are Not Like Basic Recipes1468 Words   |  6 PagesEthics is an ongoing process in counseling in which every counselor should have some sort of knowledge about. Standard ethical codes and guidelines are not like basic recipes. They are very broad and vague. Ethical codes are often use for what you need to do, but not always how you should do it. Ethics is a word that’s widely used and an integral piece to the helping profession. Ethics is important for all individuals who are working in the helping profession, including mental health, rehabilitationRead MoreThe Principle Of Autonomy, Counseling, Supervision, And / Or Practice As A Counselor1378 Words   |  6 Pagesany or all of these issues: Inclusion, Referral, Best Practice, Limitation as a Counselor, Supervision, and/or Practice as a Counselor Point out the Multicultural dimension of this principle. The principle of autonomy is considering to be the right of the clients on making their own decisions while resolving their own conflicts. The counselor cannot tell them what to do in order to resolve their problems. The counselor encourages the client’s personal growth respecting the client culture, personalRead MoreComparing Organizational Codes of Test Users1513 Words   |  7 Pagesplace. This was to assure that there was no harm done to the participants. American Counseling Association The American Counseling Association felt that this should be addressed in their code of ethics (ACA, 2005). It is addressed in section E. The American Counseling Association felt that counselors should only test in areas in which they been trained and attempted under strict supervision. The counselor must always have their client as their top concern. It was essential that no harmRead MoreCase Analysis : Rose And Randy852 Words   |  4 Pagesmarital counseling with you. One afternoon, Rose arrives early at your office and asks, â€Å"Could I meet with you privately for about 15 minutes before Randy gets here?† Ethical Issue in Case: the ethical issues could be whether to see the wife of a couple therapy before the couple session begin and how that could impair the counselor clinical judgment. Nature and Dimension of Ethical Issue: the counselor doesn’t know what her client would say; however, that could influence the counselor clinical

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

The Precipice Of Knowledge Aldous Huxley s Brave New World

The Precipice of Knowledge The marxist and feminist perspectives are both are utilized to gain a deeper understanding of literature. The feminist lens deals with the role of gender within literature, and the marxist lens focuses on the context of culture and society within literature. Each perspective plays off the other to create a cohesive approach to analyzing Brave New World. Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World highlights the issues associated with a society with a disproportional basis in manufactured social structures. These dysfunctional social structures are created through a fundamental irony: knowledge both unities and destroys humanity. Huxley shows mankind, for the first time in history, united; however, the knowledge and intellect that created this ever lasting peace is also the same factor that stripped mankind of everything that makes it human. Aldous Huxley’s dystopian society, within Brave New World, shows that knowledge is the unifying and destroying thre ad of humanity through the fabricated social hierarchy and preconditioned gender roles. The underpinning of Huxley’s Brave New World is the unifying thread of mankind: knowledge. Through the course of history, mankind has struggled to find and maintain peace. However, in Huxley’s vision of the future mankind has developed, manufactured, and fostered peace all through the knowledge gained from generations past. Mankind has three fundamental factors that drive it and are called â€Å"the functions of life:

Monday, December 9, 2019

Applying the Theories of New Historicism to Eugene ONeills The Hairy Ape free essay sample

It is clear that when this approach is applied to Eugene ONeills play The Hairy Ape, we achieve a more complete understanding of the text. Born on 1888, ONeill writes from a personal point of view that reflects not only his own battles with depression, alcoholism, attempts at suicide, and illness but the general tragedy of the human condition. After reading The Hairy Ape, we can conclude that ONeills early life influenced his writing. Like ONeill, the protagonist, Bob Smith (Yank), leads a painful life because he is caught in destructive situations and paths that he cannot escape, as he searches for ways to adjust to the economic and cultural realities of 1920s New York. ONeill, himself, left school to begin an education in, what he later called, life experience. Over the next six years he worked as a sailor, lived penniless on the waterfronts of New York, Buenos Aires, and Liverpool, became an alcoholic and tried to commit suicide. We will write a custom essay sample on Applying the Theories of New Historicism to Eugene ONeills The Hairy Ape or any similar topic specifically for you Do Not WasteYour Time HIRE WRITER Only 13.90 / page However, at 24, things began to look up for him when he became a reporter for The New London Daily Telegraph. However, things took a turn for the worse when he was diagnosed with tuberculosis. While in hospital, ONeill began to reevaluate his life in what he later termed his rebirth. It is after this period of hospitalization in 1912-1913 that he refocused his life to become a great playwright. Before ONeill, most American Drama was farce or melodrama; however, after ONeill American Theater was transformed into a serious and important cultural institution. For him, the theater was a place to highlight important social issues and ideas. Considered the first great American playwright, his plays deal with the American tragedy through the backdrop of American history and social movements. According to Ulrich Weisstein, ONeill single-handedly catapulted American drama into world prominence (193). Moreover, he introduced the European movements of realism, naturalism, and expressionism to the American stage as devices to express his comprehensive interest in all of life (Magill 323). As a leading playwright, a Nobel Laureate, and four time Pulitzer Prize winner, ONeill, utilized the Expressionist mode†¦ [to] dramatize the tortured inner life of twentieth-century man (203). Originating in art, Expressionism was a reaction against Impressionism, which aimed at painting external reality. In Literature, the Expressionists wanted to create and project their own reality, their own inner ideas and visions of what they perceived. Expressionism does not care about creating an imitation of the world; what it cares about is applying subjective and eccentric views of the world. Thus, ONeill uses the Expressionist mode in The Hairy Ape, in [order to] project the inner experience of the protagonist (Weisstein 194). For instance, in Scene One, ONeill uses light and the lack of it to express the stark contrast between the world of the passengers and the world of the workers on the Ocean Liner. Mildred Douglas epitomizes aristocracy and opportunity while Yank signifies the under- privileged worker. ONiell shifts the scene from the brightly lit promenade deck where Mildred and her Aunt relax in beautiful sunshine in a great flood, the fresh sea wind blowing across it, to the stokehole where one hanging electric bulb shed just enough light through the murky air laden with coal dust to pile up masses of shadows everywhere. Indeed, the aim of New Historicism is to treat Literature as a participant in a dynamic, changeable culture. The potential for change becomes important, because it means that Literature has a role to play in the reformation of society. With its help, power bases can be restructured and the marginalized recognized (Dobie 182). Of course, the marginalized in The Hairy Ape are the low er-class people like Yank who are oppressed by a bloody capitalist (Scene Four) society. The Hairy Ape deals with modernization and the resulting deterioration of peoples lives. The effect of industrialization and technological development is negatively felt by both the laborers and the wealthy. For the former, industrialization has diminished the human worker to nothing more than an animal. There is no thinking involved in what they need to do. Thus, these workers are forced into jobs that need only physical labor and brute force. ONeill shows this basic decline of the worker into a Neanderthal (Scene One) or Ape-like state when the Firemen are shown to resemble Neanderthals. One of the oldest workers, Paddy, is described as extremely monkey-like. It seems that the more the Firemen work, the more they retreat on the human evolutionary path. For this reason, Yank shows an affinity with a real ape at the end of the play when he says: Me n you, huh? –bot members of dis club! (Scene 8). As for the wealthy class, they are described in the stage directions as a procession of gaudy marionettes, yet with something of the relentless horror of Frankensteins in their detached, mechanical unawareness (Scene Five). Such human degeneration is apparent when Mildred calls herself the waste product (Scene Two) of her fathers steel company. Although she enjoys the financial benefits of the company, she feels unfulfilled. For her, industrialization and technological advancements do little to boost her self-worth; ONeill describes Mildred as skinny, pale and wearing white, with an expression like looking as if the vitality of her stock had been sapped before she was conceived, the expression not of its life energy but merely of the artificialities that energy had won for itself in the spending (Scene Two). For ONeill, the poor have not advanced but rather have been pulled to a low, animalistic state, while the aristocrats have risen so high above nature they have become artificial beings. In Scene Five, we see class warfare being waged against her kind. Using 5th Avenue as a battle ground, Yank attempts to initiate this revolution against Mildred and the higher class. Here, ONeill seems to be using Long as a mouthpiece for Marxist views when he says: Were trespassers ere. Proletarians keep orf the grass! arskin Jesus to giveem more money I wants to convince yer she was ony a representative of er clarss. I wants to awaken yer bloody clarss consciousness. Then yerll see its er clarss yerve got to fight, not er alone (Scene Five). Long has divided Yank and Mildred into the proletariat and the upper classes. The proletariat is the lower, working class while the upper class is the aristocrats. Influenced by Karl Marx, the Socialist Party of the United States was formed in 1901. As industrialism swept Europe and the United States, many workers felt trapped in the capitalist system, in which they faced horrific working conditions, arbitrary wage cuts, and a sense that their lives were controlled by wealthy business owners (Danver 746). According to Steve Golden, in reading literature and history, Marxist theory focuses on economics and social class, and how those elements affect the balance of power in a text. Like Marxist theory, the new historicism also focuses on the exercise of power. However, new historicist critics prefer to examine social issues, marginalized groups, and institutions that wielded power (e. g. , the church) in the time period. From his biography, we know that ONeill befriended many radicals in the Communist Labor Party and he was, therefore, sympathetic to their cause. It seems that ONeill is blaming the upper, capitalist class for causing the industrial worker to spiral downwards. It is likely that ONeill was aware that many steel workers worked twelve hours a day, seven days a week, and lived in squalid housing (Norton 667). For these reasons, when his protagonist, Yank, deteriorates into a primitive, animal-like state, it is because the jobs created by steel companies treat men like animals: imprisoned by white steel (Scene One), they are caged and forced to work in unsafe conditions. Thus, when Yank says: he made disdis cage! Steel! IT dont belong, dats what! Cages, cells, locks, bolts, barsdats what it means! holdin me down wit him at de top! (S6), it symbolizes steel as an oppressive tool for a capitalist system. Indeed, technological changes had been widening the gap between employees and employers and an upsurge of dissent emerged from this gap (Norton 583). Nowhere is this dissent more vivid than when Yank learns about the Wobblies (Scene Six). He sees this workers union as a way to seek revenge against Mildred and aristocrats in general. Referred to as a tough gang (Scene Six), the I. W. W. as a powerful force when The Hairy Ape was written. In fact, O’Neill joined the Marine Transport Workers Union of IWW, which was fighting a kind of guerrilla war for livable conditions with quick on the job direct action (Wikipedia). Clearly, ONeill was influenced by their ideas to promote worker solidarity in the revolutionary struggle to overthrow the employing class (Wikipedia). Another influence over ONeill was Karl Marx who predicted that workers worldwide would become so discontented that they would revolt and seize factories, farms, banks, and transportation lines (Norton 583). However, the only revolution that ONeill presents to us is the one going on inside Yanks mind. In Scene Seven, he has become so disillusioned with life that he protests to the police officer that his only crime was being born: I was born, see? I was born, get me! But it seems that his only way for release is to die; by the end of the play, Yank sinks so deep in depression that he chooses to die by the one creature he is constantly compared toan ape. Throughout the play, ONeill ironically notes that Yank takes on the physical posture of Auguste Rodins sculpture, The Thinker. This statue is one of the most recognizable symbols of thought. By taking the posture of this statue in the play, Yank shows his inept attempts at thinking because he does not know what it means to truly think. The closest he can get to The Thinker is to physically imitate the cultural symbol. When the stage directions call for taking the position of The Thinker, Yank cannot understand the problems he faces. As h e struggles to tink, in Scene One, he begins to look like the thinking statue. However, the other men look at him half- amusedly, as if they saw a joke. But for Yank it is no joke when he hears from Paddy how she [Mildred] shriveled away with her hands over her eyes to shut out the sight of him twas as if shed seen a great hairy ape escaped from the Zoo! Moreover, ONeill is suggesting how Yanks job has not only reduced him to an animal but also to a non-thinking piece of metal: Im part of de engines! Its me makes it hot! Its me makes it roar! Its me makes it move! Im steelsteelsteel! Im de muscles in steel, de punch behind it! (Scene One). It is only after he clashes with upper society that he begins to realize his low position in life. Their two worlds clash when Mildred first sees Yank pounding on his chest, gorilla-like (Scene Three). Mildred calls him a filthy beast and he hurls his shovel after them at the door which has just closed. It hits the steel bulkhead with a clang and falls clattering on the steel floor (Scene Three). The falling steel corresponds to Yanks falling spirit and it foreshadows his falling into despair at the end of the play. Another episode that shows his poor thinking skills is when he is thrown out of the I. W. W. He fails to grasp what has happened or why the union would throw him out. Because Yank cannot figure out the situations before him, he is incapable of functioning in a modern society. Works do not exist in isolation from their historical and cultural environments. Without a doubt, Literature has a relevancy that takes it beyond the confines of art for arts sake. Literature is a powerful force that has far reaching implications to life in general. Thus, through our analysis of ONeills The Hairy Ape, the New Historicist approach is an excellent method for analyzing and appreciating this and any other literary work. By fusing biography, politics, ideology, culture, and history, this technique revives the play from a time long gone to reawaken our senses in order to enrich and illuminate our overall understanding and appreciation of the work. Works Cited Danver, Steven. ed. Revolts, Protests, Demonstrations, and Rebellions in American History. Vol I. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2011. Eugene ONeill. Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. , 26 Feb. 2013. Web. 2 May. 2013. Golden, Steve. The Influence of Postmodernism, Part 4: New Historicism. Web. 2 May. 2013 Magill, Frank N. Ed. Mourning Becomes Electra. Masterpieces of American Literature. New York: Harpercollins, 1993. 321-325. Print. Norton, Mary Beth. et al. A People amp; a Nation. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2008. Print. ONeill, Eugene. The Hairy Ape. New York: Dover, 2005. Print. Weisstein, Ulrich. Ed. Expressionism As an International Literary Phenomenon. John Benjamins: Philadelphia, 2011. Print. Wobblies. Wikipedia: Th e Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. , 2 May. 2013. Web. 3 May. 2013.

Monday, December 2, 2019

Stop Seeking Certainty.. Minows Response To Bork Essays - Intention

"Stop Seeking Certainty.." Minow's Response To Bork Philosophy Of Law In considering the views of Robert Bork and Martha Minow, I am impressed more by Minow. I will compare their respective views and arguments in an effort to show why I prefer the arguments of Minow to those of Bork. First though it is necessary to have a brief overview of Bork's philosophy. Bork is a firm believer in the originalist mode of Constitutional interpretation. Many different scholars may have differing views as to the meaning of the word originalism. Here, it is intended to define "an.. approach to constitutional adjudication that accords binding authority to the text of the Constitution or the intentions of it's adopters" (Lyons, pp. 329). This view can be subdivided into two categories. Those categories are the intentional and textual originalist views. The intention-based originalists argue that the original intent of the framers can be discerned from a neutral reading of the Constitution and peripherally related documents. The problem here is that the framers, the adopters, the ratifiers, and the electors all had possibly separate intent and it would be difficult to know all of their intentions. According to this view, the Constitutional text merely provides clues as to the intent of the above mentioned groups. So peripheral documents, such as the Federalist papers, are important clarifiers of the original intent. The second subdivision of orginalism is called the textual orginialist view. This view argues that the actual text of the Constitution is what is most important in terms of understanding Constitutional intent. Bork began as an intention theorist, then later changed and came to adopt the textual originalist view point. Neither subdivision of the view of orginalism is very popular today, as is evidenced by the fact that Bork was not confirmed by the Congress when he was nominated for the Supreme Court. Bork argues that by reading the text, and figuring out what the public understanding of the Constitution was at the time of it's writing, we can discern what the Constitution actually means. The problem here is obvious. It is very difficult to know what the public understanding at the time of the enactment of the Constitution was. It is even difficult to know if there was in fact a public understanding at all. It seems possible that there did not exist a public awareness of all of the facets of the Constitution. Bork argues that new Amendments to the Constitution are appropriate and permissible, that these are simply additions of new original ideas. However, he is opposed to constitutional "revisionism" of any kind. Here the term revisionism is intended to mean any reauthoring of constitutional principles by any governmental body other than the legislature. I think that Bork was specifically leery of the judiciary performing revisionist acts. He seemed to be more leery of a Judiciary branch performing "revisionism" than he was of the executive branch performing such acts. Bork said "The theory [of Constitutional interpretation] must therefore enable us to say what is the limit of the judge's legitimate authority..." (Bork. pp.54). Bork argues for a kind of enforced judicial restraint. Here, when I use the phrase "judicial restraint", I mean a strict adherence to precedents, the effects of which are so ingrained in our society as to make overturning them destructive to the fabric of our society at large. Bork goes on to argue for the importance of the neutrality principle as it relates to constitutional interpretation. According to Bork, a judge should make a decision based only on an original intent understanding of a given law in a given case. No personal pr eferences should come into play. Instead, legal principles should be applied equally across all cases which those principles encompass. It is Bork's assertion that his philosophy of original understanding can supply neutrality in deriving, defining and applying any legal principle. (Bork, pp. 53) So, on to the distinctions between deriving, defining and applying. On the issue of derivation, Bork argues that via his philosophical view of original intent, it is possible to derive the meaning of any given Constitutional principle and that if any given situation is not covered by the Constitution, that situation is beyond the scope of the power and scope of the Courts jurisdiction, and thereby leaves the court "quite properly powerless.." (Bork pp.53). On the issue of defining a principle, Bork argues again that this is quite possible within his framework and that all judges need to do in order define the breadth of a given principle is to take a historical look at the events a given principle concerned itself with at the time of the principles