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The Effects Of Google And Its Impact On The Global Community
Trudging through an endless landscape of impossibly thick mud and making as little progress as a
boulder could once be compared to the painstaking task called research. However, as technology has
advanced, humanity has innovated endless global networks of connections to bring the world to the
fingertips of society. One of these is the infinite tool known as Google. While some of today 's
society is somewhat skeptical of the overwhelming expansion of the Internet, companies such as
Google have not only provided efficiency, but have guaranteed a future of advancement and vast
knowledge throughout the global community. As minds of mankind have fashioned pioneering
technology throughout history, they have always been met with some criticism; however, countless
numbers of them have succeeded in the face of doubt. Nicholas Carr wrote an article about the
effects of Google, and relates to these historical events. "[After] The arrival of Gutenberg 's printing
press...Italian Humanist Hieronimo Squarciafico worried that the easy availability of books would
lead to intellectual laziness, making men 'less studious' and weakening their minds". Although those
around Gutenberg were skeptical of the effects his innovation may cause on society, books actually
brought forth a new age of intelligence and more access to learning. The use of the Internet spreads
like a common cold, and many fear its massive existence. However, Carr realizes that Google may
turn out to be beneficial to us all.
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Renaissance Women
Influence, power and authority typically accompanied men in sixteenth century Europe, but often
they symbolically follow the beautiful women in English Renaissance plays. One instance of this is
when immediately after meeting with Bel–imperia, Hieronimo is suddenly able to initiate his
revenge, whereas previously his attempts had been futile. Throughout English Renaissance plays,
women of beauty are not only desired, but also symbolize who has power, authority, and agency.
While women typically weren't allowed to act independently and have their own agency, authors in
this time period seem to radically imply that men who have the fierce loyalty or at least control over
beautiful women can be successful. Ambitious men such as Balthazar, Lorenzo, ... Show more
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Once his friends see Helen of Troy, one says, "Let us depart, and for this glorious deed/Happy and
blessed be Faustus evermore!" (5.1.32–33). Faustus producing Helen of Troy for his friends
solidified his power in their minds and prompted them to bless him. Interestingly, the demons use
Helen of Troy to stop Faustus from seriously repenting like the Old man wanted him to. From the
perspective of the scholars, Doctor Faustus made Helen of Troy appear. However, in reality, Doctor
Faustus was only able to make her appear, because of the deal he had made with the demon
Mephistopheles and Satan, who are actually in control. Again, the writer of the play makes it
evident that those who control the woman of beauty have the power and
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Machiavellian Evaluation of Hamlet
Niccolo Machiavelli is undoubtedly one of the most enigmatic figures in the long evolving history
of political thought of modern Europe. No other doctrine of any other political theorist has been so
intensely dissected, read, reread and researched upon even after five hundred years. Machiavelli has
been accused and accepted, revered and rejected, celebrated and condemned very few political
theorists have actually managed to cause such diverse reactions in the minds of people all over the
world. It is understandable that the main cause of such diverse and contradictory reactions is the so
called "immorality" in the text. Undoubtedly, Machiavelli advices the Prince to be as opportunistic
and immoral as possible. "A prince and especially ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
According to Machiavelli the rulers who come to power by crime can survive if they use cruelty in
the beginning to establish and determine his authority and then use it to maintain and preserve the
state Claudius fails to exercise cruelty, he usurps the Kingdom in stealth. He should have complete
murdered the royal clan, killing the queen and disposing the prince. He should have wiped off the
royal clan to eliminate the possibility of revenge and then he should have ruled with an iron fist..
putting down the general population and then satisfying them later. He does not do all that at all,
thus the "rotten" stench of the court reaches the commoners too. He marries the queen, causing
tremendous discontent and affliction in the heart of the young prince. "Frailty thy name is woman–
A little month, or ere those shoes were old/With which she follow'd my poor father's body,/Like
Niobe, all tears–why, she– /O, God a beast that wants discourse of reason/Would have mourned
longer–married with my uncle,/My father's brother–but no more like my father/Than I to Hercules."
Act 1 Sc 2 146–153 He does not kill the prince when he should have as the prince had the sympathy
of the public, but when he finally decides to kill the young prince it is too late. Thus Claudius's plot
fails and in the climax he is killed by Hamlet. Fortinbras on the other hand attains the throne easily
and we can thus expect
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Better Than You Think: Why Robots Will-And Must-Take Our Jobs
Past, Present, and Future: Artificial Intelligence vs Human Intelligence Since of the technological
era, people have experienced different change of lifestyles because the human´s needs have
increased through over time. Consequently, technology has taken different ways: robots, search
engines, and social media since the last Industrial Revolution. Therefore, people have been
concerned with those changes that are happening now and are going to happen in the future. That is
why in his essay, "Better than Human: Why robots Will– and Must–Take Our Jobs," Kevin Kelly
reports that technology as robots are going to take our jobs and create more fields of jobs and people
have to learn how work with robots. Nicholas Carr´s essay, "Is Google Making Us Stupid," he states
that technology as Google has changed the way of thinking and cognitive skills of people. "Smarter
than You Think: How Technology is Changing Our minds for the Better," by Clive Thompson, he
explains that people who have worked alongside robots have much more benefits than the others.
Those writers' statements give some historical and scientist events from the beginning of
technological era, examples of how technology as the Internet has affected cognitive skills of people
now, and how technology and people are going to be in the future. The Industrial Revolution and the
first automation brought many significant changes. The three authors present some perspective
events when the technology arrived. Kelly declares that when technology arrived, many employees
who worked on farm lost their jobs because machines can do better and quickly people task (299).
Supporting Kelly's statement, Carr explains that there are negative effects with the often use of
machines to write as typewriter. For example, in 1883 Friedrich Nietzche had a typewriter which
affected his work such as style of his writing and thoughts (318). That is why brains of people are
easily adaptable and take some abilities from machine (319). Another example that Carr emphasizes
is about mechanical clock in Technics and Civilization by Lewis Mumford, which says that people
events create a measurable division in sequence of time (319–320). For that reason, Carr reports that
people started to
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Article Summary: Is Google Making USupid By Nicholas Carr
The Mind Altering Net In the essay "Is Google Making Us Stupid? What the Internet is Doing to our
Brains," Nicholas Carr argues that the internet has altered, possibly not in a good way, how people
use their cognitive mind. Today, most everyone is getting on a computer and using the internet to do
research, read an article, or scan the news in all its forms. They don't realize that how they now read
and research, with the use of the internet, has weakened their mind cognitively. The Internet,
according to the author, is modifying the way that people read and take in knowledge through their
senses. Carr recognized that he was losing his ability to read deeply into a text. When he sat down to
read a short article, he caught himself ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He became aware that he was not digging into the root of what the article was saying, but was rather
solely looking for the highlights. He said, "I feel as if I'm always dragging my wayward brain back
to the text" (Carr). He felt this change as he began to use the internet more as a writer for research
and for generally just surfing the Net. This is not uncommon today. Most people are on their phones
and computers for many hours a day and this has become a natural way of life. When not working,
they are scanning through social media sites where a person only writes a sentence or two. This
results in sporadic browsing through hundreds of feeds looking aimlessly for information. A recent
study conducted by the University College London showed that people using internet sites were not
reading as much. They read a little from one article and then went on to the next, never actually
understanding the author's view (Carr).
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Essay On English 312
Research Goal During the undergraduate career many english major's will encounter a course in
which they focus on a specific time period of literature. English 317: British Literature 1500–1700
is one such course. English 317 is designed to allow students the freedom and flexibility to identify
and formulate questions for productive inquiry, to evaluate sources for credibility, bias, quality of
evidence, and quality of reasoning, and to use citation methods and structures appropriate to their
field of study (UWP English Department). These course goals identical to the UW English
Department's Research goal. It is because this course focuses on a time period in which no living
being is yet alive to have personally experienced it, that a heavy amount of research is required. The
paper "The Witch of Edmonton: Revisited" from English 317, demonstrates how I have learned ...
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While looking into these several types of plays I was able to accumulate enough information to
effectively argue that there is a separate treatment of women versus men who accept deals with the
devil in return for magical powers. This claim is designed to display that the bias between gender is
prevalent enough to allow the use of satanic pacts and devil magic to become acceptable for men in
certain instances but not for women. Through this idea I had to comb through many resources that
would help defend my argument. This being said, I had to chose carefully and effectively what
sources I included in my paper. In order to do this I had to evaluate sources for credibility, bias,
quality of evidence, and quality of reasoning, a requirement of the English Department's research
goal. The best demonstration of this is an excerpt that displays how I had evaluated
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It's An App For That Can Make Shopping More Convenient Or...
"There's an app for that". I find myself pointing out this somewhat obvious fact on a regular basis.
What is there not an app for? Honestly, every aspect of a person's average day can be assisted in
some way by an app. App for the alarm in the morning, for your Starbucks coffee, an app for the
morning news, apps to track your weight and calorie intake, a pedometer app to count your steps,
GPS to get you to an appointment, banking apps, calendar, grocery list, coupons, Safeway even has
an app. Apps that make shopping more convenient or ordering food. There are fertility tracking
apps, memory training apps, apps for school and reading, apps to look for a job, home, or new car.
Literally you name it, there's an app for it. Not to mention the countless games and apps geared
towards children. According to Statista.com as of July 2015 "Android users were able to choose
between 1.6 million apps. Apple 's App Store remained the second–largest app store with 1.5 million
available apps." In addition there are 400,000 Amazon apps, 340,000 apps available through the
Windows phone store and 130,000 available on Blackberry world.(Statista.com) Totaling over 3.9
million apps available at the touch of a finger–tip.
To many this may seem like life just getting more and more convenient. However, has it been
considered how much these apps enable and inevitably handicap our ability to function without
them? Essentially with all of the apps being made available today not only are we "chained" to
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Is Internet Making Us Stupid Or Smarter?
Is Internet Making Us Stupid Or Smarter
Nicholar Carr, executive editor of the Harvard Business Review and author of "Is Google Making
Us Stoopid" argues that our dependency on the easily accesible, information rich Internet medium is
gradually morphing our conscious thought process, making it harder to immerse ourselves in deep
concentration and contemplation of information resulting in the diminishment of our unique
intelligence into that of an artificial intelligence. On the other hand, Jamais Cascio, senior at the
Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies and author of "Get Smarter" illustrates the Internet
as a medium capable of increasing our overal ability to think, evolving the human brain to be
capable of multitasking quickly and effectively making judgements in a short amount of time.
Technological progress has come across it's fair share of admiration and fear on how it might change
our natural ability to think. Being one of those technological progress, Internet has changed the way
we read and think, currently diffusing our ability to concentrate on specific information, but in the
long run trasforming us into a more efficient being, capable of quickly amassing knowledge from a
rapidly growing ocean of database.
On the question of of Internet changing the way we read and think, Carr claims that through the
continuous usage of the internet, not only him but his friends and acquintences whom are literary
majors have also been gradually experiencing a loss in
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Importance Of Technology In Education
"Abundance of books makes men less studious; it destroys memory and enfeebles the mind by
relieving it of too much work." 15th century Italian humanist Hieronimo Squarciafico said this in
1477 to show his objection to the printing press after its invention. He was worried that the amount
of books made readily available by printing presses would hurt people's minds and memories.
Replace the word "books" with "technology" and a current opinion against the use of technology for
learning is shown. Nowadays, many people are concerned that using technology for learning
purposes is actually making people lazier and less apt to think for themselves, but that is not the
case. When used for learning purposes, technology is extremely useful and beneficial for students of
all ages and abilities. Educational technology is important because it allows learning to be
individualized, motivates and engages students, and leads to improved academic achievement.
Using technology in education can be beneficial for students in that it allows for their educations to
be individualized. What this means is that, through technology, students can take charge of their
own learning by finding out which learning method works best for them and using it to better their
learning experience. In a traditional classroom, something like this would not have been entirely
possible. A traditional classroom teacher simply stands in front of the students and teaches them in
the same way. In the world of education,
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Oresteia Compare And Contrast Essay
Peter Meineck's Oresteia and Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy incorporates vengeance and
revenge as a motif, which centralizes on the tragic deaths of Clytemnestra and Hieronimo's children.
The two protagonists act out because of a deep and furious anguish over what they perceive as
senseless murders of their beloved children, Iphigenia and Horatio. Clytemnestra and Hieronimo
view this crime committed by the murderers as an act of betrayal. Thus, it encourages the two
protagonists to seek revenge for their own child's unlawful death. Both parents regard their
vindictive motives as justified acts, due to the grief and pain that has been inflicted upon them. This
essay examines the similarities and differences of the two protagonists' ... Show more content on
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Clytemnestra's overwhelming hate for her husband deepens because Agamemnon shows no feelings
of remorse and believes that Iphigenia's sacrifice "[is] for the best" (216–224). Aeschylus recalls the
final moments of Iphigenia's sacrifice: "her pleading, her terrified cries of "Father"!/[...]/ Her eyes
threw a last pitiful glace at her sacrificers,/ but like a figure in a painting,/she could not call to them
for help" (228–242). Consequently, Iphigenia's heartbreaking sacrifice motivates Clytemnestra's
"unforgiving child–avenging Rage" (155) upon her husband, Agamemnon. Clytemnestra's maternal
instinct implores her to take revenge against Agamemnon for his mistreatment of their daughter.
Furthermore, Clytemnestra views Agamemnon's sacrifice of Iphigenia as a betrayal of their marital
love. Clytemnestra believes her husband deserves the same fate as Iphigenia because Agamemnon "
[has] sacrificed [their] own child, [Clytemnestra's] labour of love, to charm away the cruel storm–
winds of Thrace" (1417–1417). To Clytemnestra, Agamemnon must "suffer, deed for deed,/ for what
he [has] [done] to [their] daughter,/Iphigenia, his own flesh and blood!"
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Hamlet and The Spanish Tragedy
The parallels shown between Hamlet and The Spanish Tragedy demonstrate the influence Kyd's
play had on Shakespeare. The similarities can be seen throughout the plot lines and context of both
plays. While using the plays as different tools, both are used for expediting revenge. Shakespeare,
through the impact of Kyd's play, established and perfected an ideal plot for a play expressing
revengeful tragedy. The actions and thoughts that Hamlet shows greatly displays many
characteristics from The Spanish Tragedy. Hamlet models himself after Hieronimo in the way he
approaches revenge. However, Hamlet wants his victims to suffer not only on earth but in the
afterlife. Kyd and Shakespeare utilize both meta–theaters to exact revenge and reveal guilt. The
intention of a play within a play by Kyd is used for the format of Hieronimo's death. It varies from
that of Hamlet in layout and context. Hamlet plans precisely how he will avenge his father's death
and when he will strike. Hamlet exclaims, "When he is...about some act/ That has no relish of
salvation in't––/ Then trip him...And that his soul may be damned and black/ As hell" (Shakespeare
III.iv.94–100). Killing Claudius in a sinful state will satisfy him, his father, and affect him by
suffering in the afterlife as well. Hieronimo also plots his revenge, but is solely concerned with
achieve earthly revenge. The Spanish Tragedy includes a play that is longer in duration than that of
Hamlet. Kyd does this to allow the audience to
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The Characteristics Of Jeronimo And The Revenger's Tragedy
'He that will swear Jeronimo [...] the best plays yet, shall pass unexpected at here as a man whose
judgement shows it is constant, and hath stood still these five and twenty, or thirty years'
––Ben Jonson (Bartholmew Fair, 1614)
Jonson, ever caustic, made no bones about his disdain for sensationalist tragedies that catered to the
bloodlust of the 'groundlings,' yet even such an inveterate critic as he, was forced to admit that these
melodramas had withstood the test of time. I would like to discuss two plays for this question –
'Jeronimo' or Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy performed in 1587 or 1588 and Middleton's The
Revenger's Tragedy, a play that appeared almost at the end of the period entitled 'the golden age of
revenge tragedy' ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Both dramatists stick to the formula in that sense with Hieronimo and Vindice but also expend effort
in giving their protagonists, psychological depth, setting them apart from the one–dimensional
avengers that one would expect from a formulaic play. Kyd carefully structures the process by
which Hieronimo, a tragic subject, comes into being, while in Vindice, that process has already
taken place, nine years ago. The frustrated fury of Hieronimo, a fury that arises in part from an
inability to locate justice in the universe, is depicted with understanding. 'For in revenge,' he cries,
'my heart would find relief.' He is aware even before he carries out his vengeance, that it is the only
act that will provide some relief to his anguish. By contrast, in Vindice, Middleton creates a
'revenger' with a past forgotten by all but him. He is a figure that stays on the margins whether as
Vindice or as Piato – irony is central to his manner and his view of life. His own sexual anxieties are
evident, paradoxically enough, especially in his 'test' of Gratiana and Castiza and his exuberance
and zest in his own actions are reminiscent of a Volpone or Mosca. In the end though, both
recognise the essential futility of their actions even while acknowledging its inevitability. 'Tis time
to die when we are ourselves our foes, 'says Vindice, a phrase that beautifully captures the mental
emptiness of revenge. Apart from the protagonists, other characters too are finely sketched. Bel–
Imperia's character is an intriguing one – she is no uni–dimensional puppet caught between a
dynastic marriage and romantic love. It is clear that she is far from being sexually innocent and in
fact, the catalyst in Hieronimo's revenge. She has been read in many different ways but what
emerges at the end, is her strength of convictions and her desire to control her own destiny. In The
Revenger's Tragedy,
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Revenge Tragedy Research Paper
Revenge tragedies have certain characteristics that are necessary to follow in order for it to actually
be a revenge tragedy. Although there is a long list of characteristics, all of them do not have to
actually be in the play for it to be revenge. There are core characteristics that have to be involved;
two of them focus on a revenge being planned while including tragic elements. First, in order to
have a revenge tragedy play, there must be a murder committed of some kind involved most likely
towards the beginning. By a character killing someone, whether a loved one or a friend, it allows the
person who is hurt by the situation the time to plan a revenge to get back at the murderer. For
instance, at the beginning of the Spanish ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Moreover; there are often ghosts or in the case of The Spanish Tragedy, revenge is personified that
allow revenge to constantly be brought up. The ghosts or supernatural are what egg the revenger on.
Although if we look at The Spanish Tragedy with revenge as being personified, he plays the chorus
but never has any direct contact with people. Then, if we look at The Revenger's Tragedy we see a
comet that allows the Duke to see that revenge is about to take place, "I am not pleased at that ill–
knotted fire/ they say, whom art and learning weds/when stars wear locks they threaten great men's
heads" (Middleton, 5.3.18). Then finally in The Tragedy of Hoffman or A Revenge for a Father, a
major storm develops that Hoffman believes is coming from the heavens and allows Hoffman an
opportunity to have his enemy shipwreck. In contrast to the ghosts, the audience or reader must get
a sense of blood and violence. While reading The Revenger's Tragedy we see many lines that
mention blood but one stands out significantly, "I'll damn you at your pleasure: precious deed!/
After your lust, O, 'twill be fine to bleed (Middleton, 2.2.126–27). Usually the revenger will kill
multiple people along the way, even those who are innocent because the revenger has gone crazy.
Finally, we finish with one of the most important core characteristics of a Revenge Tragedy play,
success
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Love And Madness In The Duchess Of Malfi
Webster's The Duchess of Malfi (1608) a tragedy of love and madness. Webster is interested in
exploring the connection between love and mad jealousy by locating the homicidal jealousy in a
brother yearning for his sister, he compounds our awareness of the dark side of sexual desire, and
the potential for specific types of love to explode into violence. In Ferdinand, Webster presents us
with another form of forbidden love and enables us to explore the relationship between love and
death from the perspective of the villain.
Once Ferdinand hears of his sister's marriage to Antonio he raves "Methinks I see her laughing –
excellent hyena! – Talk to me somewhat, quickly, or my imagination will carry me to see her in the
shameful act of sin" The madness of Ferdinand's behavior toward his sister has led a lot of people to
conclude that he actually has incestuous feeling for her and he doesn't want his family legacy to be
transferred to this low birth and gives him new social identity as her husband. But when duchess
first proposes to Antonio he says "Ambition, madam, is a great man's madness" (1.1.412) which
shows that Antonio is not interested of getting social identity.
George Bernard Shaw an Irish critic and playwright ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
We see love between friends and passionate young lovers. And how love can turn to madness and
this madness can leads to death. As Hieronimo said recalling to his enemies: "Bethink thyself,
Hieronimo, Recall thy wits, recount thy former wrongs Thou hast received by murder of thy son,
and lastly, not least! How Isabel, Once his mother and thy dearest wife, all woe–begone for him hath
slain herself. Behoves thee then, Hieronimo, to be reveng'd, the plot is laid of dire revenge: on, then,
Hieronimo, pursue revenge; for nothing wants but acting for revenge!" (4.4.40) he is recalling his
bad and sad memories as a cry full of
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How Does Shakespeare Use Natural Imagery In Titus Andronicus
Natural imagery and references to nature are found throughout
The Spanish Tragedy and Titus Andronicus. In Kyd's play Hieronimo's garden serves as the setting
for no less than three important scenes, including the pivotal scene in which the bloody corpse of
Horatio is discovered hanging from a bower by his father. Titus Andronicus also employs a natural
setting as the scene of criminal activity, for Lavinia is savagely raped and mutilated and her husband
is murdered while the two are walking in the forest. Also, Marcus and Titus use pastoral language in
their descriptions of the handless Lavinia, comparing her to a fountain spewing forth blood and to a
tree with its branches lopped
9ff.,·These natural images are not included in the two plays for ornamentation; rather, I feel that
Kyd and Shakespeare include these images because nature had many connotations for their
audience. To most Elizabethans, the natural and unspoiled world was God's handiwork, and nature
was seen as a benificent force in the world. The image of defiled nature which is presented in both
The Spanish Tragedy and Titus Andronicus would undoubtedly have had a shocking dramatic
impact on Kyd's and Shakespeare's audiences. The Renaissance concept of nature differs vastly
from that of the
12
13 twentieth century. According to Isabel Rivers, the modern scholar or student approaches
Renaissance literature with an obvious disadvantage because he does not share the same views,
beliefs and preconceptions as the
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Hamlet as So Much More Than a Traditional Revenge Tragedy...
Hamlet as So Much More Than a Traditional Revenge Tragedy
Although Shakespeare wrote Hamlet closely following the conventions of a traditional revenge
tragedy, he goes far beyond this form in his development of Hamlet's character. Shakespeare's
exploration of Hamlet's complex thoughts and emotions is perhaps more the focus of the play rather
than that of revenge, thus in Hamlet Shakespeare greatly develops and enhances the form of the
traditional revenge tragedy.
The main source of Hamlet is Saxo Grammaticus' Historiae Danicae, a folk tale that has a similar
plot to Hamlet; however, Shakespeare greatly transforms this story of revenge when creating
Hamlet. Shakespeare also draws upon ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The revenge ghost is a convention Kyd took from Seneca's tragedies, and in fact, Don Andrea has
similar parallels to the ghost of Achilles in Seneca's play Troades.
The first appearance of the old king's ghost in the opening scene of Hamlet would have been
suggestive of a revenge tragedy to an Elizabethan audience. However, the ghost does not demand
revenge as Don Andrea does, but rather adds to the uncertainty and sense of foreboding in the scene.
The play begins in a 'bitter cold' night, bringing a sense of pathetic fallacy to the scene, as the setting
adds to the sense of trouble in Denmark, as described by Horatio and Marcellus. It is not until Act I,
Scene V that the ghost appears to Hamlet, demanding 'revenge [for] his foul and most unnatural
murder,' and thus introducing the theme of revenge in Hamlet. Although Hamlet proclaims that '[he
will] sweep to [his] revenge,' he does not take his revenge until the final scene of the play. Hamlet's
inaction and delay of his revenge is paralleled in The Spanish Tragedy, however the reasons for
delay in Hamlet are somewhat different.
In The Spanish Tragedy, immediately after Hieronimo discovers his son's body he claims that it is
only 'in revenge [his] heart would find relief,' and
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William Shakespeare 's Play, Kyd 's The Spanish Tragedy...
Early Modern drama criticism has been concerned with the parallels between punishment on–stage,
performed for an audience in plays such as Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy; and punishment as
it was enacted on the scaffold. In his play, Kyd aligns this parallel with another: that between
revenge and justice. Though separate in one sense, revenge can be understood in terms of justice,
and justice therefore seemingly has some qualities in common with its presumed opposite. On top of
this, Kyd superimposes the tension between Catholicism and Protestantism. The Spanish Tragedy,
then, sets up and destroys a three pronged opposition: the opposition between judicial punishment
and theatrical punishment; the opposition between rival forms of Christianity; and the opposition
between the public and private revenger. I will discuss each of these oppositions in turn and it is
through this lens that I will examine the representation of punishment in the play. Executions are
rare, even taboo, as visual representations on the Elizabethan stage. As Foucault explains, 'the public
execution [was] more than an act of justice; it was a manifestation of force, or rather, it was justice
as the physical, material and awesome force of the sovereign deployed there.' Condoning theatrical
reconstructions of the public execution could potentially destabilize the officially sanctioned terror
of the monarch by, as James Shapiro puts it, 'showing it often enough to make familiar or by
resituating it
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Rhetorical Analysis Of 'Is Google Making USupid'
For almost two decades, Google has surely been the top dog of search engines on the worldwide
internet. Beginning as a research project by two college students, Sergey Brin and Larry Page,
called Backrub, Google has now become the answer to all questions. Google's mission is to organize
the world's information and make it accessible and useful. According to Niholas Carr's article "Is
Google Making Us Stupid" he states that our use of the internet has serious effects on the way we
real, think, and live. Carr's struggle along with his friends who he's said are experiencing these same
struggles, seem to be putting the blame on the internet for their lack of attentiveness, when there can
be other underlying issues other than excessive use of the web affecting your brain.
In Carr's article he explains that he is a writer and the internet has become very useful to him over
the years. However, he's noticed that his attention span has shortened to where it's difficult for him
to focus on a lengthy piece of writing. Carr describes his troubles by stating that he finds himself
unconsciously skimming through the text instead of thoroughly reading word for word. Carr quotes
Maryanne Wolf, a developmental psychologist at Tufts University who says "We are how we read."
Wolf worries that the style ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The Italian humanist Hieronimo Squarciafico worried that the easy availability of books would lead
to intellectual laziness, making men "less studious" and weakening their minds. Others argued that
cheaply printed books and broadsheets would undermine religious authority, demean the work of
scholars and scribes, and spread sedition and debauchery. The change in technology seems to have
had a lasting effect on human beings. Carr goes back as far as the 19th century to back his argument
of the internet affecting the brain. He strategically states all the negatives aspects but none of the
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Revenge Conventions In Hamlet Essay
Hamlet is a play written by William Shakespeare that very closely follows the dramatic conventions
of revenge in Elizabethan theater. All revenge tragedies originally stemmed from the Greeks, who
wrote and performed the first plays. After the Greeks came Seneca who was very influential to all
Elizabethan tragedy writers. Seneca who was Roman, basically set all of the ideas and the norms for
all revenge play writers in the Renaissance era including William Shakespeare. The two most
famous English revenge tragedies written in the Elizabethan era were Hamlet, written by
Shakespeare and The Spanish Tragedy, written by Thomas Kyd. These two plays used mostly all of
the Elizabethan conventions for revenge tragedies in their plays. Hamlet ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Seneca 's influence formed part of a developing tradition of tragedies whose plots hinge on political
power, forbidden sexuality, family honor and private revenge. "There was no author who exercised a
wider or deeper influence upon the Elizabethan mind or upon the Elizabethan form of tragedy than
did Seneca." For the dramatists of Renaissance Italy, France and England, classical tragedy meant
only the ten Latin plays of Seneca and not Euripides, Aeschylus and Sophocles. "Hamlet is certainly
not much like any play of Seneca 's one can name, but Seneca is undoubtedly one of the effective
ingredients in the emotional charge of Hamlet. Hamlet without Seneca is inconceivable." During the
time of Elizabethan theater, plays about tragedy and revenge were very common and a regular
convention seemed to be formed on what aspects should be put into a typical revenge tragedy. In all
revenge tragedies first and foremost, a crime is committed and for various reasons laws and justice
cannot punish the crime so the individual who is the main character, goes through with the revenge
in spite of everything. The main character then usually had a period of doubt , where he tries to
decide whether or not to go through with the revenge, which usually involves tough and complex
planning. Other features that were typical were the appearance of a ghost, to get the revenger to go
through with the deed. The
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
William Shakespeare 's ' The Spanish Tragedy '
Within literature, genre is determined by subject, setting and plot. In book shops and library's, books
are organized and categorised by genre, making it extremely easy for the reader to find exactly what
they are looking for. Generally, genre is very restricted– often making writers feel as though they
must follow a specific set of rules and conventions if they want their piece of writing to fall into a
particular genre with a certain theme. Throughout my essay, I will look into how Thomas Kyd's 'The
Spanish Tragedy' follows the traditional techniques we typically assume will be in a revenge
tragedy, and how Shakespeare's 'Hamlet' follows these conventions as well as how Hamlet
sometimes challenges the typical conventions of revenge tragedy plays and pushes them. I will also
discuss the notion of revenge, as well as discuss how the two plays use the conventions of the genre
to promote different ways of thinking about the ethics of revenge.
Revenge tragedy was a popular genre of drama in the late 16th and 17th centuries in England.
People at this time enjoyed the blood and gore filled story lines typically featured in revenge
tragedies. Revenge tragedies in there very basic plots contain the quest for vengeance, where
carnage, madness, death of a loved one and mutilation are the very basic conventions which we
expect to come across when we are reading a piece of this popular genre. Both the Spanish Tragedy
and Hamlet are well known revenge tragedies following the same story
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Education Of The United States Essay
The Education Revolution
Currently, the United States is ranked 14th in its educational standard, 17th in educational
performance and 24th in literacy (Mark). Compared to the rest of the world, we are behind countries
like Poland, China, Finland and New Zealand. For a country that prides itself on its successful
western society, what is stopping us from having an education system to match the standards we
have put on the rest of our amenities. However, a solution is closer than it seems. According to
Rasmussen College, there are 6.7 million students currently enrolled in online courses, therefore
with an increasing number of students attending these classes, it is not a question on whether or not
these classes will become normal, but when and how these classes will revolutionize our education
system (Bird). Online courses offer students the ability to create an education based around their
schedule, and allow students who may struggle or may not be able to attend a traditional school
environment the chance to have an equal education. Not only can the students benefit from an
online education environment, but both schools and professors can gain from an online system.
Moreover, such courses can help create a global education system that allows anyone to have the
same access to an education anywhere in the world as long as they have a connection to the internet.
Online classes allow students to create a flexible schedule for students with jobs and busy home
lives and can
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Dumbest Generation : The Dumbest Generation? DonT Be Dumb
"We are gradually changing from a nation of calloused hands to a nation of agile brains." – Marcel
Just. (Begley 92) This quote really speaks to me. I find it to be very true as we are focusing more on
developing new technology to do the work we might be doing with our hands. It is similar to the
common expression "Work Smarter not Harder". I think that this is what the internet is letting us do.
However many authors and writers do not think this is the case. They believe that the internet is
making us less intelligent as it is rewiring our brain to think in order of internet articles rather than
books. I on the contrary believe the internet is giving us an easy opportunity to learn which is
therefore making us more intelligent. Is Generation Y the dumbest generation yet? In Sharon
Begley's essay "The Dumbest Generation? Don't be Dumb" she brings up an author by the name if
Mark Bauerlein. Bauerlein has wrote a book describing how he believes Generation Y is the
"dumbest generation" and is blaming it on their ignorance with use of the internet. He uses very
basic evidence, such as that there has been a decline in adult literacy from 40 percent of high school
grads in 1992 to 31 percent in 2003. (Begley 90) Begley brings up a very good point as the
definition of "Dumbest". (91) She proposed two separate definitions, the first being "holding the
least knowledge" and the second being "lacking such fundamental cognitive capacities as the ability
to think critically and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Arden Of Faversham Critical Analysis
The play Arden of Faversham follows the Renaissance genre of tragedy, yet it focuses on the
domestic sphere in the unconventional setting of Arden and Alice's home, rather than the courtly
setting of most tragedies written in the Elizabethan period, in the realm of nobility. While most
tragedies following this genre concern themselves with the authority of those in the noble court,
Arden of Faversham's primary concern is with the authority within their own home.
As theatre began shifting away from the political sphere in the Elizabethan period and focused more
on comedic and tragic genres, playwrights were able to feature more intimate and domestic issues in
their spectacles, but still regarded courtly settings as the appropriate setting ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
This is demonstrated after Gaveston reads the letter brought to him from the king, as he states,
"What greater blisse can hap to Gaveston,/ Then live and be the favorit of a king?" (Edward I.I 4–5).
This letter is calling Gaveston back to Edward's court, Gaveston's exile and return is a reoccurring
theme throughout the play. Marlowe constructs this play through the characterization of his
characters, as the king searches for his identity in his relationship with Gaveston. The play itself
opens with a soliloquy by Gaveston, " 'My father is deceast ; come, Gaveston,/ And share the
kingdom with thy deerest friend'" (Edward I.I. 1–2), yet these first two lines are actually the words
of the king, interplaying the relationship with the king, and the role of the courtly world. However,
while Arden and its characters stray from the courtly world created in Edward II and The Spanish
Tragedy, the author of Arden does not keep this consistent throughout. For example, although Arden
is unconventionally not of noble birth, he does marry Alice who was "descended of a noble house"
(Arden I.202). Although the play is not directly representing a concern with state issues and
territories,
The playwright of Arden uses irony, as seen in the passage, "My saving husband hoards up bags of
gold/ To make our children rich" (Arden I. 220–1). The irony represented in this statement is
magnified as it was Alice who claims that her husband saving money for their next generation, yet
she is
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Women in Renaissance Tragedy A Mirror of Masculine Society...
Women in Renaissance Tragedy A Mirror of Masculine Society *No Works Cited The life of
Renaissance women was not one that was conducive to independence, or much else, outside of their
obligations to her husband and the running of the household in general. Women, viewed as property
in Renaissance culture, were valued for their class, position, and the wealth (or lack thereof) that
they would bring into a marriage. This being said, the role of women in the literature of the day
reflects the cultural biases that were an ingrained part of everyday life. The depiction of women in
theatre particularly, is evidence of the patriarchal society that dominated the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries. And as the genre of tragedy emerges into ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Don Andrea is murdered, and it is at this point that Bel–Imperia first introduces the idea of revenge
to the play. As soon as she finds out that Andrea is dead she vows to kill his murderer. She demands,
"revenge [for the] death of my beloved" (I.IV.65). She immediately vows that Balthazar shall "reap
long repentance for his murderous deed". Following the death of Don Andrea, Bel–Imperia's
relationship with other men, particularly Horatio, again dominates the action of the play. Horatio,
Bel–Imperia's suitor, is the son of Hieronimo, a civil servant; Lorenzo is the son of the Duke of
Castile, and Balthazar is the Prince of Portugal. Once Lorenzo and Balthazar discover that Horatio
is Bel–Imperia's suitor, Balthazar comments, "Ambitious villain, how his boldness grows!" (II. ii.
41) indicative also of the reigning justice of the ruling class. Horatio is viewed as trying to attain
status beyond his station in life and hereby gains the spite of Lorenzo and Balthazar. This coupled
with Balthazar's desire for Bel–imperia drive them to murder Horatio. Bel–imperia pleads for his
life, claiming that she bore him no love, to which Balthazar replies, "But Balthazar loves Bel–
imperia" (II. iv. 59) with a simplicity that implies that his mere desire for Bel–Imperia is reason
enough for the death of Horatio. These events trigger a number of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Importance Of Technology
Technology has been evolving and improving at an extraordinary rate so much so that it already
started affecting not only the way we live but also the way we behave and think. This essay
synthetizes the ideas explored in articles "Better than human: Why Robots will–and Must–Take Our
Jobs" by Kevin Kelly, "Is google making Us Stupid?" by Nicholas Carr, and "Smarter than you
Think: How Technology Is Changing Our Minds for the Better" by Clive Thompson. The authors
brainstorm the past, current, and future repercussions that new technologies will cause in our
society, economy, and own selves and whether we should welcome them or not.
Kevin Kelly starts this discussion by studying the relationship that humans and automation have had
since the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Another evidence for the fact that machines are getting smart is that they are even able to play chess
and beat humans. In 1997, Garry Kasparov, a chess master, was defeated by IBM'S Deep Blue
supercomputer in a tournament of six games (Thompson 240–360). This resulted in the conclusion
that chess itself was over. Why would we be still interested in chess if even a chess grand master can
be easily defeat by a machine?
The idea that one day everyone will have access to use robot and other new technologies will
expand our potential to create new concepts and activities. Robots and automation have been
excellent initiatives to create technologies that were never thought to be possible or even exist.
Technology is indiscriminate this way, piling up possibilities and options for both humans and
machines (Kelly 299–312). An example of this concept is Google, a smart search engine that has
allow us to find and share information that in turn favors the development of innovations in different
fields. However, Nicholas Carr suspects that the way our minds works are being changed, and
technologies, like Google, are the cause. Now, with tools like google, it has become easier and faster
to find information on internet than on periodical rooms of libraries. Carr explains that what the Net
seems to be doing is chipping away our capacity for concentration and contemplation. Our mind
now expects to take
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Artificial Intelligence In Nicholas Carr's Is Google...
The Advancement of Intelligence With every passing year, it seems as though humans are becoming
more attached to their electronic devices as technology advances at an astounding rate. As a result of
this, many people believe that the trade off for having such advanced technology is a decrease in
overall brain function, a point that is essentially what Nicholas Carr is arguing is true in his essay Is
Google Making Us Stupid?. However, a majority of Carr's argument lies in the fact that people do
not read as much because of the Internet, only want information directly given to them instead of
having to read through pages of words, and are becoming dangerously reliant on artificial
intelligence. However, based on the recent surge of technological ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Essentially, he bluntly says throughout his article that the Internet and search engines such as
Google are "making us stupid". He goes on to explain how the rise of the internet is adverse to the
intellectual mind because it is starting to replace physical reading, and reading allows for
"intellectual vibrations" to be "set off" within the minds of the people (Carr 28). However, it clear to
see that as technology evolves, so does the world and its views on what is considered to be
intellectual. While people may not be reading as many physical books anymore, they do tend to
educate themselves on the world around them in other ways. Even on seemingly casual social media
sites such as Twitter and Instagram, people speak out about what they understand and feel about the
world around them, showing how "intellectual vibrations" are now set off differently than in years
past. A technology press conference, a controversial social media post, or a compelling article from
an online news source could get a person to deeply think about something just any form of physical
print would be able to; this is made evident by how the younger generations are currently using the
Internet and its sites. In fact, Carr even quotes an Italian humanist by the name of Hieronimo
Squarciafico who stated that the introduction of the Gutenberg printing press and readily available
publications would make men "less studious" (28). However, the introduction of readily available
literature has proven to have had the opposite effect, with the most studious of people accepting
books and other printed publications as some of their most treasured intellectual resources. In the
same way, a parallel can be drawn to the Internet, which will likely turn out to be a blessing for
intellectuals around the world just as the printing press was all those years ago. With knowledge and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Our Dependence On The Electronic Tools
The way in which we store, process, and retrieve information, in other words, our schemas, has been
altered by the use of the web. Our dependence on the electronic tools we interact with on a daily
basis may have altered how we communicate what we have learned to others. "The traditional
manner of structuring argument may have been replaced by a more diffuse manner that parallels the
format of web content" (Rusciano & Xia, 2013). Our knowledge structure has moved from print–
based to web–based (Rusciano & Xia, 2013) and our use of the web has moved the way our
knowledge is organized and shared (Rusciano & Xia, 2013). The traditional form of knowledge is in
an indexical linear structure, which "...has formed the basis for the creation of writing, and reached
maturity in the linear visual space of the printing press; it remains the core of contemporary
knowledge dissemination and acquisition" (Rusciano & Xia, 2013). The web, however, works in an
entirely different manner. "...this structure through the web centers on the concept of an associative
system of organizing and presenting information that is nonsequential and open–ended" (Rusciano
& Xia, 2013). While the Internet is still a fairly new invention, it is not an entirely new concept.
Vannevar Bush had a big vision in 1945 of what the power of machines could do for organizing and
retrieving information. He dreamt up a device, which he called the memex machine. "Bush's
imaginative machine allows for the entire body of human
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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The Effects Of Google And Its Impact On The Global Community

  • 1. The Effects Of Google And Its Impact On The Global Community Trudging through an endless landscape of impossibly thick mud and making as little progress as a boulder could once be compared to the painstaking task called research. However, as technology has advanced, humanity has innovated endless global networks of connections to bring the world to the fingertips of society. One of these is the infinite tool known as Google. While some of today 's society is somewhat skeptical of the overwhelming expansion of the Internet, companies such as Google have not only provided efficiency, but have guaranteed a future of advancement and vast knowledge throughout the global community. As minds of mankind have fashioned pioneering technology throughout history, they have always been met with some criticism; however, countless numbers of them have succeeded in the face of doubt. Nicholas Carr wrote an article about the effects of Google, and relates to these historical events. "[After] The arrival of Gutenberg 's printing press...Italian Humanist Hieronimo Squarciafico worried that the easy availability of books would lead to intellectual laziness, making men 'less studious' and weakening their minds". Although those around Gutenberg were skeptical of the effects his innovation may cause on society, books actually brought forth a new age of intelligence and more access to learning. The use of the Internet spreads like a common cold, and many fear its massive existence. However, Carr realizes that Google may turn out to be beneficial to us all. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Renaissance Women Influence, power and authority typically accompanied men in sixteenth century Europe, but often they symbolically follow the beautiful women in English Renaissance plays. One instance of this is when immediately after meeting with Bel–imperia, Hieronimo is suddenly able to initiate his revenge, whereas previously his attempts had been futile. Throughout English Renaissance plays, women of beauty are not only desired, but also symbolize who has power, authority, and agency. While women typically weren't allowed to act independently and have their own agency, authors in this time period seem to radically imply that men who have the fierce loyalty or at least control over beautiful women can be successful. Ambitious men such as Balthazar, Lorenzo, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Once his friends see Helen of Troy, one says, "Let us depart, and for this glorious deed/Happy and blessed be Faustus evermore!" (5.1.32–33). Faustus producing Helen of Troy for his friends solidified his power in their minds and prompted them to bless him. Interestingly, the demons use Helen of Troy to stop Faustus from seriously repenting like the Old man wanted him to. From the perspective of the scholars, Doctor Faustus made Helen of Troy appear. However, in reality, Doctor Faustus was only able to make her appear, because of the deal he had made with the demon Mephistopheles and Satan, who are actually in control. Again, the writer of the play makes it evident that those who control the woman of beauty have the power and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Machiavellian Evaluation of Hamlet Niccolo Machiavelli is undoubtedly one of the most enigmatic figures in the long evolving history of political thought of modern Europe. No other doctrine of any other political theorist has been so intensely dissected, read, reread and researched upon even after five hundred years. Machiavelli has been accused and accepted, revered and rejected, celebrated and condemned very few political theorists have actually managed to cause such diverse reactions in the minds of people all over the world. It is understandable that the main cause of such diverse and contradictory reactions is the so called "immorality" in the text. Undoubtedly, Machiavelli advices the Prince to be as opportunistic and immoral as possible. "A prince and especially ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... According to Machiavelli the rulers who come to power by crime can survive if they use cruelty in the beginning to establish and determine his authority and then use it to maintain and preserve the state Claudius fails to exercise cruelty, he usurps the Kingdom in stealth. He should have complete murdered the royal clan, killing the queen and disposing the prince. He should have wiped off the royal clan to eliminate the possibility of revenge and then he should have ruled with an iron fist.. putting down the general population and then satisfying them later. He does not do all that at all, thus the "rotten" stench of the court reaches the commoners too. He marries the queen, causing tremendous discontent and affliction in the heart of the young prince. "Frailty thy name is woman– A little month, or ere those shoes were old/With which she follow'd my poor father's body,/Like Niobe, all tears–why, she– /O, God a beast that wants discourse of reason/Would have mourned longer–married with my uncle,/My father's brother–but no more like my father/Than I to Hercules." Act 1 Sc 2 146–153 He does not kill the prince when he should have as the prince had the sympathy of the public, but when he finally decides to kill the young prince it is too late. Thus Claudius's plot fails and in the climax he is killed by Hamlet. Fortinbras on the other hand attains the throne easily and we can thus expect ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. Better Than You Think: Why Robots Will-And Must-Take Our Jobs Past, Present, and Future: Artificial Intelligence vs Human Intelligence Since of the technological era, people have experienced different change of lifestyles because the human´s needs have increased through over time. Consequently, technology has taken different ways: robots, search engines, and social media since the last Industrial Revolution. Therefore, people have been concerned with those changes that are happening now and are going to happen in the future. That is why in his essay, "Better than Human: Why robots Will– and Must–Take Our Jobs," Kevin Kelly reports that technology as robots are going to take our jobs and create more fields of jobs and people have to learn how work with robots. Nicholas Carr´s essay, "Is Google Making Us Stupid," he states that technology as Google has changed the way of thinking and cognitive skills of people. "Smarter than You Think: How Technology is Changing Our minds for the Better," by Clive Thompson, he explains that people who have worked alongside robots have much more benefits than the others. Those writers' statements give some historical and scientist events from the beginning of technological era, examples of how technology as the Internet has affected cognitive skills of people now, and how technology and people are going to be in the future. The Industrial Revolution and the first automation brought many significant changes. The three authors present some perspective events when the technology arrived. Kelly declares that when technology arrived, many employees who worked on farm lost their jobs because machines can do better and quickly people task (299). Supporting Kelly's statement, Carr explains that there are negative effects with the often use of machines to write as typewriter. For example, in 1883 Friedrich Nietzche had a typewriter which affected his work such as style of his writing and thoughts (318). That is why brains of people are easily adaptable and take some abilities from machine (319). Another example that Carr emphasizes is about mechanical clock in Technics and Civilization by Lewis Mumford, which says that people events create a measurable division in sequence of time (319–320). For that reason, Carr reports that people started to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. Article Summary: Is Google Making USupid By Nicholas Carr The Mind Altering Net In the essay "Is Google Making Us Stupid? What the Internet is Doing to our Brains," Nicholas Carr argues that the internet has altered, possibly not in a good way, how people use their cognitive mind. Today, most everyone is getting on a computer and using the internet to do research, read an article, or scan the news in all its forms. They don't realize that how they now read and research, with the use of the internet, has weakened their mind cognitively. The Internet, according to the author, is modifying the way that people read and take in knowledge through their senses. Carr recognized that he was losing his ability to read deeply into a text. When he sat down to read a short article, he caught himself ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He became aware that he was not digging into the root of what the article was saying, but was rather solely looking for the highlights. He said, "I feel as if I'm always dragging my wayward brain back to the text" (Carr). He felt this change as he began to use the internet more as a writer for research and for generally just surfing the Net. This is not uncommon today. Most people are on their phones and computers for many hours a day and this has become a natural way of life. When not working, they are scanning through social media sites where a person only writes a sentence or two. This results in sporadic browsing through hundreds of feeds looking aimlessly for information. A recent study conducted by the University College London showed that people using internet sites were not reading as much. They read a little from one article and then went on to the next, never actually understanding the author's view (Carr). ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Essay On English 312 Research Goal During the undergraduate career many english major's will encounter a course in which they focus on a specific time period of literature. English 317: British Literature 1500–1700 is one such course. English 317 is designed to allow students the freedom and flexibility to identify and formulate questions for productive inquiry, to evaluate sources for credibility, bias, quality of evidence, and quality of reasoning, and to use citation methods and structures appropriate to their field of study (UWP English Department). These course goals identical to the UW English Department's Research goal. It is because this course focuses on a time period in which no living being is yet alive to have personally experienced it, that a heavy amount of research is required. The paper "The Witch of Edmonton: Revisited" from English 317, demonstrates how I have learned ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... While looking into these several types of plays I was able to accumulate enough information to effectively argue that there is a separate treatment of women versus men who accept deals with the devil in return for magical powers. This claim is designed to display that the bias between gender is prevalent enough to allow the use of satanic pacts and devil magic to become acceptable for men in certain instances but not for women. Through this idea I had to comb through many resources that would help defend my argument. This being said, I had to chose carefully and effectively what sources I included in my paper. In order to do this I had to evaluate sources for credibility, bias, quality of evidence, and quality of reasoning, a requirement of the English Department's research goal. The best demonstration of this is an excerpt that displays how I had evaluated ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. It's An App For That Can Make Shopping More Convenient Or... "There's an app for that". I find myself pointing out this somewhat obvious fact on a regular basis. What is there not an app for? Honestly, every aspect of a person's average day can be assisted in some way by an app. App for the alarm in the morning, for your Starbucks coffee, an app for the morning news, apps to track your weight and calorie intake, a pedometer app to count your steps, GPS to get you to an appointment, banking apps, calendar, grocery list, coupons, Safeway even has an app. Apps that make shopping more convenient or ordering food. There are fertility tracking apps, memory training apps, apps for school and reading, apps to look for a job, home, or new car. Literally you name it, there's an app for it. Not to mention the countless games and apps geared towards children. According to Statista.com as of July 2015 "Android users were able to choose between 1.6 million apps. Apple 's App Store remained the second–largest app store with 1.5 million available apps." In addition there are 400,000 Amazon apps, 340,000 apps available through the Windows phone store and 130,000 available on Blackberry world.(Statista.com) Totaling over 3.9 million apps available at the touch of a finger–tip. To many this may seem like life just getting more and more convenient. However, has it been considered how much these apps enable and inevitably handicap our ability to function without them? Essentially with all of the apps being made available today not only are we "chained" to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. Is Internet Making Us Stupid Or Smarter? Is Internet Making Us Stupid Or Smarter Nicholar Carr, executive editor of the Harvard Business Review and author of "Is Google Making Us Stoopid" argues that our dependency on the easily accesible, information rich Internet medium is gradually morphing our conscious thought process, making it harder to immerse ourselves in deep concentration and contemplation of information resulting in the diminishment of our unique intelligence into that of an artificial intelligence. On the other hand, Jamais Cascio, senior at the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies and author of "Get Smarter" illustrates the Internet as a medium capable of increasing our overal ability to think, evolving the human brain to be capable of multitasking quickly and effectively making judgements in a short amount of time. Technological progress has come across it's fair share of admiration and fear on how it might change our natural ability to think. Being one of those technological progress, Internet has changed the way we read and think, currently diffusing our ability to concentrate on specific information, but in the long run trasforming us into a more efficient being, capable of quickly amassing knowledge from a rapidly growing ocean of database. On the question of of Internet changing the way we read and think, Carr claims that through the continuous usage of the internet, not only him but his friends and acquintences whom are literary majors have also been gradually experiencing a loss in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. Importance Of Technology In Education "Abundance of books makes men less studious; it destroys memory and enfeebles the mind by relieving it of too much work." 15th century Italian humanist Hieronimo Squarciafico said this in 1477 to show his objection to the printing press after its invention. He was worried that the amount of books made readily available by printing presses would hurt people's minds and memories. Replace the word "books" with "technology" and a current opinion against the use of technology for learning is shown. Nowadays, many people are concerned that using technology for learning purposes is actually making people lazier and less apt to think for themselves, but that is not the case. When used for learning purposes, technology is extremely useful and beneficial for students of all ages and abilities. Educational technology is important because it allows learning to be individualized, motivates and engages students, and leads to improved academic achievement. Using technology in education can be beneficial for students in that it allows for their educations to be individualized. What this means is that, through technology, students can take charge of their own learning by finding out which learning method works best for them and using it to better their learning experience. In a traditional classroom, something like this would not have been entirely possible. A traditional classroom teacher simply stands in front of the students and teaches them in the same way. In the world of education, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Oresteia Compare And Contrast Essay Peter Meineck's Oresteia and Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy incorporates vengeance and revenge as a motif, which centralizes on the tragic deaths of Clytemnestra and Hieronimo's children. The two protagonists act out because of a deep and furious anguish over what they perceive as senseless murders of their beloved children, Iphigenia and Horatio. Clytemnestra and Hieronimo view this crime committed by the murderers as an act of betrayal. Thus, it encourages the two protagonists to seek revenge for their own child's unlawful death. Both parents regard their vindictive motives as justified acts, due to the grief and pain that has been inflicted upon them. This essay examines the similarities and differences of the two protagonists' ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Clytemnestra's overwhelming hate for her husband deepens because Agamemnon shows no feelings of remorse and believes that Iphigenia's sacrifice "[is] for the best" (216–224). Aeschylus recalls the final moments of Iphigenia's sacrifice: "her pleading, her terrified cries of "Father"!/[...]/ Her eyes threw a last pitiful glace at her sacrificers,/ but like a figure in a painting,/she could not call to them for help" (228–242). Consequently, Iphigenia's heartbreaking sacrifice motivates Clytemnestra's "unforgiving child–avenging Rage" (155) upon her husband, Agamemnon. Clytemnestra's maternal instinct implores her to take revenge against Agamemnon for his mistreatment of their daughter. Furthermore, Clytemnestra views Agamemnon's sacrifice of Iphigenia as a betrayal of their marital love. Clytemnestra believes her husband deserves the same fate as Iphigenia because Agamemnon " [has] sacrificed [their] own child, [Clytemnestra's] labour of love, to charm away the cruel storm– winds of Thrace" (1417–1417). To Clytemnestra, Agamemnon must "suffer, deed for deed,/ for what he [has] [done] to [their] daughter,/Iphigenia, his own flesh and blood!" ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. Hamlet and The Spanish Tragedy The parallels shown between Hamlet and The Spanish Tragedy demonstrate the influence Kyd's play had on Shakespeare. The similarities can be seen throughout the plot lines and context of both plays. While using the plays as different tools, both are used for expediting revenge. Shakespeare, through the impact of Kyd's play, established and perfected an ideal plot for a play expressing revengeful tragedy. The actions and thoughts that Hamlet shows greatly displays many characteristics from The Spanish Tragedy. Hamlet models himself after Hieronimo in the way he approaches revenge. However, Hamlet wants his victims to suffer not only on earth but in the afterlife. Kyd and Shakespeare utilize both meta–theaters to exact revenge and reveal guilt. The intention of a play within a play by Kyd is used for the format of Hieronimo's death. It varies from that of Hamlet in layout and context. Hamlet plans precisely how he will avenge his father's death and when he will strike. Hamlet exclaims, "When he is...about some act/ That has no relish of salvation in't––/ Then trip him...And that his soul may be damned and black/ As hell" (Shakespeare III.iv.94–100). Killing Claudius in a sinful state will satisfy him, his father, and affect him by suffering in the afterlife as well. Hieronimo also plots his revenge, but is solely concerned with achieve earthly revenge. The Spanish Tragedy includes a play that is longer in duration than that of Hamlet. Kyd does this to allow the audience to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. The Characteristics Of Jeronimo And The Revenger's Tragedy 'He that will swear Jeronimo [...] the best plays yet, shall pass unexpected at here as a man whose judgement shows it is constant, and hath stood still these five and twenty, or thirty years' ––Ben Jonson (Bartholmew Fair, 1614) Jonson, ever caustic, made no bones about his disdain for sensationalist tragedies that catered to the bloodlust of the 'groundlings,' yet even such an inveterate critic as he, was forced to admit that these melodramas had withstood the test of time. I would like to discuss two plays for this question – 'Jeronimo' or Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy performed in 1587 or 1588 and Middleton's The Revenger's Tragedy, a play that appeared almost at the end of the period entitled 'the golden age of revenge tragedy' ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Both dramatists stick to the formula in that sense with Hieronimo and Vindice but also expend effort in giving their protagonists, psychological depth, setting them apart from the one–dimensional avengers that one would expect from a formulaic play. Kyd carefully structures the process by which Hieronimo, a tragic subject, comes into being, while in Vindice, that process has already taken place, nine years ago. The frustrated fury of Hieronimo, a fury that arises in part from an inability to locate justice in the universe, is depicted with understanding. 'For in revenge,' he cries, 'my heart would find relief.' He is aware even before he carries out his vengeance, that it is the only act that will provide some relief to his anguish. By contrast, in Vindice, Middleton creates a 'revenger' with a past forgotten by all but him. He is a figure that stays on the margins whether as Vindice or as Piato – irony is central to his manner and his view of life. His own sexual anxieties are evident, paradoxically enough, especially in his 'test' of Gratiana and Castiza and his exuberance and zest in his own actions are reminiscent of a Volpone or Mosca. In the end though, both recognise the essential futility of their actions even while acknowledging its inevitability. 'Tis time to die when we are ourselves our foes, 'says Vindice, a phrase that beautifully captures the mental emptiness of revenge. Apart from the protagonists, other characters too are finely sketched. Bel– Imperia's character is an intriguing one – she is no uni–dimensional puppet caught between a dynastic marriage and romantic love. It is clear that she is far from being sexually innocent and in fact, the catalyst in Hieronimo's revenge. She has been read in many different ways but what emerges at the end, is her strength of convictions and her desire to control her own destiny. In The Revenger's Tragedy, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Revenge Tragedy Research Paper Revenge tragedies have certain characteristics that are necessary to follow in order for it to actually be a revenge tragedy. Although there is a long list of characteristics, all of them do not have to actually be in the play for it to be revenge. There are core characteristics that have to be involved; two of them focus on a revenge being planned while including tragic elements. First, in order to have a revenge tragedy play, there must be a murder committed of some kind involved most likely towards the beginning. By a character killing someone, whether a loved one or a friend, it allows the person who is hurt by the situation the time to plan a revenge to get back at the murderer. For instance, at the beginning of the Spanish ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Moreover; there are often ghosts or in the case of The Spanish Tragedy, revenge is personified that allow revenge to constantly be brought up. The ghosts or supernatural are what egg the revenger on. Although if we look at The Spanish Tragedy with revenge as being personified, he plays the chorus but never has any direct contact with people. Then, if we look at The Revenger's Tragedy we see a comet that allows the Duke to see that revenge is about to take place, "I am not pleased at that ill– knotted fire/ they say, whom art and learning weds/when stars wear locks they threaten great men's heads" (Middleton, 5.3.18). Then finally in The Tragedy of Hoffman or A Revenge for a Father, a major storm develops that Hoffman believes is coming from the heavens and allows Hoffman an opportunity to have his enemy shipwreck. In contrast to the ghosts, the audience or reader must get a sense of blood and violence. While reading The Revenger's Tragedy we see many lines that mention blood but one stands out significantly, "I'll damn you at your pleasure: precious deed!/ After your lust, O, 'twill be fine to bleed (Middleton, 2.2.126–27). Usually the revenger will kill multiple people along the way, even those who are innocent because the revenger has gone crazy. Finally, we finish with one of the most important core characteristics of a Revenge Tragedy play, success ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Love And Madness In The Duchess Of Malfi Webster's The Duchess of Malfi (1608) a tragedy of love and madness. Webster is interested in exploring the connection between love and mad jealousy by locating the homicidal jealousy in a brother yearning for his sister, he compounds our awareness of the dark side of sexual desire, and the potential for specific types of love to explode into violence. In Ferdinand, Webster presents us with another form of forbidden love and enables us to explore the relationship between love and death from the perspective of the villain. Once Ferdinand hears of his sister's marriage to Antonio he raves "Methinks I see her laughing – excellent hyena! – Talk to me somewhat, quickly, or my imagination will carry me to see her in the shameful act of sin" The madness of Ferdinand's behavior toward his sister has led a lot of people to conclude that he actually has incestuous feeling for her and he doesn't want his family legacy to be transferred to this low birth and gives him new social identity as her husband. But when duchess first proposes to Antonio he says "Ambition, madam, is a great man's madness" (1.1.412) which shows that Antonio is not interested of getting social identity. George Bernard Shaw an Irish critic and playwright ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... We see love between friends and passionate young lovers. And how love can turn to madness and this madness can leads to death. As Hieronimo said recalling to his enemies: "Bethink thyself, Hieronimo, Recall thy wits, recount thy former wrongs Thou hast received by murder of thy son, and lastly, not least! How Isabel, Once his mother and thy dearest wife, all woe–begone for him hath slain herself. Behoves thee then, Hieronimo, to be reveng'd, the plot is laid of dire revenge: on, then, Hieronimo, pursue revenge; for nothing wants but acting for revenge!" (4.4.40) he is recalling his bad and sad memories as a cry full of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. How Does Shakespeare Use Natural Imagery In Titus Andronicus Natural imagery and references to nature are found throughout The Spanish Tragedy and Titus Andronicus. In Kyd's play Hieronimo's garden serves as the setting for no less than three important scenes, including the pivotal scene in which the bloody corpse of Horatio is discovered hanging from a bower by his father. Titus Andronicus also employs a natural setting as the scene of criminal activity, for Lavinia is savagely raped and mutilated and her husband is murdered while the two are walking in the forest. Also, Marcus and Titus use pastoral language in their descriptions of the handless Lavinia, comparing her to a fountain spewing forth blood and to a tree with its branches lopped 9ff.,·These natural images are not included in the two plays for ornamentation; rather, I feel that Kyd and Shakespeare include these images because nature had many connotations for their audience. To most Elizabethans, the natural and unspoiled world was God's handiwork, and nature was seen as a benificent force in the world. The image of defiled nature which is presented in both The Spanish Tragedy and Titus Andronicus would undoubtedly have had a shocking dramatic impact on Kyd's and Shakespeare's audiences. The Renaissance concept of nature differs vastly from that of the 12 13 twentieth century. According to Isabel Rivers, the modern scholar or student approaches Renaissance literature with an obvious disadvantage because he does not share the same views, beliefs and preconceptions as the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Hamlet as So Much More Than a Traditional Revenge Tragedy... Hamlet as So Much More Than a Traditional Revenge Tragedy Although Shakespeare wrote Hamlet closely following the conventions of a traditional revenge tragedy, he goes far beyond this form in his development of Hamlet's character. Shakespeare's exploration of Hamlet's complex thoughts and emotions is perhaps more the focus of the play rather than that of revenge, thus in Hamlet Shakespeare greatly develops and enhances the form of the traditional revenge tragedy. The main source of Hamlet is Saxo Grammaticus' Historiae Danicae, a folk tale that has a similar plot to Hamlet; however, Shakespeare greatly transforms this story of revenge when creating Hamlet. Shakespeare also draws upon ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The revenge ghost is a convention Kyd took from Seneca's tragedies, and in fact, Don Andrea has similar parallels to the ghost of Achilles in Seneca's play Troades. The first appearance of the old king's ghost in the opening scene of Hamlet would have been suggestive of a revenge tragedy to an Elizabethan audience. However, the ghost does not demand revenge as Don Andrea does, but rather adds to the uncertainty and sense of foreboding in the scene. The play begins in a 'bitter cold' night, bringing a sense of pathetic fallacy to the scene, as the setting adds to the sense of trouble in Denmark, as described by Horatio and Marcellus. It is not until Act I, Scene V that the ghost appears to Hamlet, demanding 'revenge [for] his foul and most unnatural murder,' and thus introducing the theme of revenge in Hamlet. Although Hamlet proclaims that '[he will] sweep to [his] revenge,' he does not take his revenge until the final scene of the play. Hamlet's inaction and delay of his revenge is paralleled in The Spanish Tragedy, however the reasons for delay in Hamlet are somewhat different. In The Spanish Tragedy, immediately after Hieronimo discovers his son's body he claims that it is only 'in revenge [his] heart would find relief,' and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. William Shakespeare 's Play, Kyd 's The Spanish Tragedy... Early Modern drama criticism has been concerned with the parallels between punishment on–stage, performed for an audience in plays such as Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy; and punishment as it was enacted on the scaffold. In his play, Kyd aligns this parallel with another: that between revenge and justice. Though separate in one sense, revenge can be understood in terms of justice, and justice therefore seemingly has some qualities in common with its presumed opposite. On top of this, Kyd superimposes the tension between Catholicism and Protestantism. The Spanish Tragedy, then, sets up and destroys a three pronged opposition: the opposition between judicial punishment and theatrical punishment; the opposition between rival forms of Christianity; and the opposition between the public and private revenger. I will discuss each of these oppositions in turn and it is through this lens that I will examine the representation of punishment in the play. Executions are rare, even taboo, as visual representations on the Elizabethan stage. As Foucault explains, 'the public execution [was] more than an act of justice; it was a manifestation of force, or rather, it was justice as the physical, material and awesome force of the sovereign deployed there.' Condoning theatrical reconstructions of the public execution could potentially destabilize the officially sanctioned terror of the monarch by, as James Shapiro puts it, 'showing it often enough to make familiar or by resituating it ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Rhetorical Analysis Of 'Is Google Making USupid' For almost two decades, Google has surely been the top dog of search engines on the worldwide internet. Beginning as a research project by two college students, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, called Backrub, Google has now become the answer to all questions. Google's mission is to organize the world's information and make it accessible and useful. According to Niholas Carr's article "Is Google Making Us Stupid" he states that our use of the internet has serious effects on the way we real, think, and live. Carr's struggle along with his friends who he's said are experiencing these same struggles, seem to be putting the blame on the internet for their lack of attentiveness, when there can be other underlying issues other than excessive use of the web affecting your brain. In Carr's article he explains that he is a writer and the internet has become very useful to him over the years. However, he's noticed that his attention span has shortened to where it's difficult for him to focus on a lengthy piece of writing. Carr describes his troubles by stating that he finds himself unconsciously skimming through the text instead of thoroughly reading word for word. Carr quotes Maryanne Wolf, a developmental psychologist at Tufts University who says "We are how we read." Wolf worries that the style ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Italian humanist Hieronimo Squarciafico worried that the easy availability of books would lead to intellectual laziness, making men "less studious" and weakening their minds. Others argued that cheaply printed books and broadsheets would undermine religious authority, demean the work of scholars and scribes, and spread sedition and debauchery. The change in technology seems to have had a lasting effect on human beings. Carr goes back as far as the 19th century to back his argument of the internet affecting the brain. He strategically states all the negatives aspects but none of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. Revenge Conventions In Hamlet Essay Hamlet is a play written by William Shakespeare that very closely follows the dramatic conventions of revenge in Elizabethan theater. All revenge tragedies originally stemmed from the Greeks, who wrote and performed the first plays. After the Greeks came Seneca who was very influential to all Elizabethan tragedy writers. Seneca who was Roman, basically set all of the ideas and the norms for all revenge play writers in the Renaissance era including William Shakespeare. The two most famous English revenge tragedies written in the Elizabethan era were Hamlet, written by Shakespeare and The Spanish Tragedy, written by Thomas Kyd. These two plays used mostly all of the Elizabethan conventions for revenge tragedies in their plays. Hamlet ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Seneca 's influence formed part of a developing tradition of tragedies whose plots hinge on political power, forbidden sexuality, family honor and private revenge. "There was no author who exercised a wider or deeper influence upon the Elizabethan mind or upon the Elizabethan form of tragedy than did Seneca." For the dramatists of Renaissance Italy, France and England, classical tragedy meant only the ten Latin plays of Seneca and not Euripides, Aeschylus and Sophocles. "Hamlet is certainly not much like any play of Seneca 's one can name, but Seneca is undoubtedly one of the effective ingredients in the emotional charge of Hamlet. Hamlet without Seneca is inconceivable." During the time of Elizabethan theater, plays about tragedy and revenge were very common and a regular convention seemed to be formed on what aspects should be put into a typical revenge tragedy. In all revenge tragedies first and foremost, a crime is committed and for various reasons laws and justice cannot punish the crime so the individual who is the main character, goes through with the revenge in spite of everything. The main character then usually had a period of doubt , where he tries to decide whether or not to go through with the revenge, which usually involves tough and complex planning. Other features that were typical were the appearance of a ghost, to get the revenger to go through with the deed. The ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. William Shakespeare 's ' The Spanish Tragedy ' Within literature, genre is determined by subject, setting and plot. In book shops and library's, books are organized and categorised by genre, making it extremely easy for the reader to find exactly what they are looking for. Generally, genre is very restricted– often making writers feel as though they must follow a specific set of rules and conventions if they want their piece of writing to fall into a particular genre with a certain theme. Throughout my essay, I will look into how Thomas Kyd's 'The Spanish Tragedy' follows the traditional techniques we typically assume will be in a revenge tragedy, and how Shakespeare's 'Hamlet' follows these conventions as well as how Hamlet sometimes challenges the typical conventions of revenge tragedy plays and pushes them. I will also discuss the notion of revenge, as well as discuss how the two plays use the conventions of the genre to promote different ways of thinking about the ethics of revenge. Revenge tragedy was a popular genre of drama in the late 16th and 17th centuries in England. People at this time enjoyed the blood and gore filled story lines typically featured in revenge tragedies. Revenge tragedies in there very basic plots contain the quest for vengeance, where carnage, madness, death of a loved one and mutilation are the very basic conventions which we expect to come across when we are reading a piece of this popular genre. Both the Spanish Tragedy and Hamlet are well known revenge tragedies following the same story ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. The Education Of The United States Essay The Education Revolution Currently, the United States is ranked 14th in its educational standard, 17th in educational performance and 24th in literacy (Mark). Compared to the rest of the world, we are behind countries like Poland, China, Finland and New Zealand. For a country that prides itself on its successful western society, what is stopping us from having an education system to match the standards we have put on the rest of our amenities. However, a solution is closer than it seems. According to Rasmussen College, there are 6.7 million students currently enrolled in online courses, therefore with an increasing number of students attending these classes, it is not a question on whether or not these classes will become normal, but when and how these classes will revolutionize our education system (Bird). Online courses offer students the ability to create an education based around their schedule, and allow students who may struggle or may not be able to attend a traditional school environment the chance to have an equal education. Not only can the students benefit from an online education environment, but both schools and professors can gain from an online system. Moreover, such courses can help create a global education system that allows anyone to have the same access to an education anywhere in the world as long as they have a connection to the internet. Online classes allow students to create a flexible schedule for students with jobs and busy home lives and can ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. The Dumbest Generation : The Dumbest Generation? DonT Be Dumb "We are gradually changing from a nation of calloused hands to a nation of agile brains." – Marcel Just. (Begley 92) This quote really speaks to me. I find it to be very true as we are focusing more on developing new technology to do the work we might be doing with our hands. It is similar to the common expression "Work Smarter not Harder". I think that this is what the internet is letting us do. However many authors and writers do not think this is the case. They believe that the internet is making us less intelligent as it is rewiring our brain to think in order of internet articles rather than books. I on the contrary believe the internet is giving us an easy opportunity to learn which is therefore making us more intelligent. Is Generation Y the dumbest generation yet? In Sharon Begley's essay "The Dumbest Generation? Don't be Dumb" she brings up an author by the name if Mark Bauerlein. Bauerlein has wrote a book describing how he believes Generation Y is the "dumbest generation" and is blaming it on their ignorance with use of the internet. He uses very basic evidence, such as that there has been a decline in adult literacy from 40 percent of high school grads in 1992 to 31 percent in 2003. (Begley 90) Begley brings up a very good point as the definition of "Dumbest". (91) She proposed two separate definitions, the first being "holding the least knowledge" and the second being "lacking such fundamental cognitive capacities as the ability to think critically and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. Arden Of Faversham Critical Analysis The play Arden of Faversham follows the Renaissance genre of tragedy, yet it focuses on the domestic sphere in the unconventional setting of Arden and Alice's home, rather than the courtly setting of most tragedies written in the Elizabethan period, in the realm of nobility. While most tragedies following this genre concern themselves with the authority of those in the noble court, Arden of Faversham's primary concern is with the authority within their own home. As theatre began shifting away from the political sphere in the Elizabethan period and focused more on comedic and tragic genres, playwrights were able to feature more intimate and domestic issues in their spectacles, but still regarded courtly settings as the appropriate setting ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This is demonstrated after Gaveston reads the letter brought to him from the king, as he states, "What greater blisse can hap to Gaveston,/ Then live and be the favorit of a king?" (Edward I.I 4–5). This letter is calling Gaveston back to Edward's court, Gaveston's exile and return is a reoccurring theme throughout the play. Marlowe constructs this play through the characterization of his characters, as the king searches for his identity in his relationship with Gaveston. The play itself opens with a soliloquy by Gaveston, " 'My father is deceast ; come, Gaveston,/ And share the kingdom with thy deerest friend'" (Edward I.I. 1–2), yet these first two lines are actually the words of the king, interplaying the relationship with the king, and the role of the courtly world. However, while Arden and its characters stray from the courtly world created in Edward II and The Spanish Tragedy, the author of Arden does not keep this consistent throughout. For example, although Arden is unconventionally not of noble birth, he does marry Alice who was "descended of a noble house" (Arden I.202). Although the play is not directly representing a concern with state issues and territories, The playwright of Arden uses irony, as seen in the passage, "My saving husband hoards up bags of gold/ To make our children rich" (Arden I. 220–1). The irony represented in this statement is magnified as it was Alice who claims that her husband saving money for their next generation, yet she is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Women in Renaissance Tragedy A Mirror of Masculine Society... Women in Renaissance Tragedy A Mirror of Masculine Society *No Works Cited The life of Renaissance women was not one that was conducive to independence, or much else, outside of their obligations to her husband and the running of the household in general. Women, viewed as property in Renaissance culture, were valued for their class, position, and the wealth (or lack thereof) that they would bring into a marriage. This being said, the role of women in the literature of the day reflects the cultural biases that were an ingrained part of everyday life. The depiction of women in theatre particularly, is evidence of the patriarchal society that dominated the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. And as the genre of tragedy emerges into ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Don Andrea is murdered, and it is at this point that Bel–Imperia first introduces the idea of revenge to the play. As soon as she finds out that Andrea is dead she vows to kill his murderer. She demands, "revenge [for the] death of my beloved" (I.IV.65). She immediately vows that Balthazar shall "reap long repentance for his murderous deed". Following the death of Don Andrea, Bel–Imperia's relationship with other men, particularly Horatio, again dominates the action of the play. Horatio, Bel–Imperia's suitor, is the son of Hieronimo, a civil servant; Lorenzo is the son of the Duke of Castile, and Balthazar is the Prince of Portugal. Once Lorenzo and Balthazar discover that Horatio is Bel–Imperia's suitor, Balthazar comments, "Ambitious villain, how his boldness grows!" (II. ii. 41) indicative also of the reigning justice of the ruling class. Horatio is viewed as trying to attain status beyond his station in life and hereby gains the spite of Lorenzo and Balthazar. This coupled with Balthazar's desire for Bel–imperia drive them to murder Horatio. Bel–imperia pleads for his life, claiming that she bore him no love, to which Balthazar replies, "But Balthazar loves Bel– imperia" (II. iv. 59) with a simplicity that implies that his mere desire for Bel–Imperia is reason enough for the death of Horatio. These events trigger a number of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. The Importance Of Technology Technology has been evolving and improving at an extraordinary rate so much so that it already started affecting not only the way we live but also the way we behave and think. This essay synthetizes the ideas explored in articles "Better than human: Why Robots will–and Must–Take Our Jobs" by Kevin Kelly, "Is google making Us Stupid?" by Nicholas Carr, and "Smarter than you Think: How Technology Is Changing Our Minds for the Better" by Clive Thompson. The authors brainstorm the past, current, and future repercussions that new technologies will cause in our society, economy, and own selves and whether we should welcome them or not. Kevin Kelly starts this discussion by studying the relationship that humans and automation have had since the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Another evidence for the fact that machines are getting smart is that they are even able to play chess and beat humans. In 1997, Garry Kasparov, a chess master, was defeated by IBM'S Deep Blue supercomputer in a tournament of six games (Thompson 240–360). This resulted in the conclusion that chess itself was over. Why would we be still interested in chess if even a chess grand master can be easily defeat by a machine? The idea that one day everyone will have access to use robot and other new technologies will expand our potential to create new concepts and activities. Robots and automation have been excellent initiatives to create technologies that were never thought to be possible or even exist. Technology is indiscriminate this way, piling up possibilities and options for both humans and machines (Kelly 299–312). An example of this concept is Google, a smart search engine that has allow us to find and share information that in turn favors the development of innovations in different fields. However, Nicholas Carr suspects that the way our minds works are being changed, and technologies, like Google, are the cause. Now, with tools like google, it has become easier and faster to find information on internet than on periodical rooms of libraries. Carr explains that what the Net seems to be doing is chipping away our capacity for concentration and contemplation. Our mind now expects to take ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Artificial Intelligence In Nicholas Carr's Is Google... The Advancement of Intelligence With every passing year, it seems as though humans are becoming more attached to their electronic devices as technology advances at an astounding rate. As a result of this, many people believe that the trade off for having such advanced technology is a decrease in overall brain function, a point that is essentially what Nicholas Carr is arguing is true in his essay Is Google Making Us Stupid?. However, a majority of Carr's argument lies in the fact that people do not read as much because of the Internet, only want information directly given to them instead of having to read through pages of words, and are becoming dangerously reliant on artificial intelligence. However, based on the recent surge of technological ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Essentially, he bluntly says throughout his article that the Internet and search engines such as Google are "making us stupid". He goes on to explain how the rise of the internet is adverse to the intellectual mind because it is starting to replace physical reading, and reading allows for "intellectual vibrations" to be "set off" within the minds of the people (Carr 28). However, it clear to see that as technology evolves, so does the world and its views on what is considered to be intellectual. While people may not be reading as many physical books anymore, they do tend to educate themselves on the world around them in other ways. Even on seemingly casual social media sites such as Twitter and Instagram, people speak out about what they understand and feel about the world around them, showing how "intellectual vibrations" are now set off differently than in years past. A technology press conference, a controversial social media post, or a compelling article from an online news source could get a person to deeply think about something just any form of physical print would be able to; this is made evident by how the younger generations are currently using the Internet and its sites. In fact, Carr even quotes an Italian humanist by the name of Hieronimo Squarciafico who stated that the introduction of the Gutenberg printing press and readily available publications would make men "less studious" (28). However, the introduction of readily available literature has proven to have had the opposite effect, with the most studious of people accepting books and other printed publications as some of their most treasured intellectual resources. In the same way, a parallel can be drawn to the Internet, which will likely turn out to be a blessing for intellectuals around the world just as the printing press was all those years ago. With knowledge and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Our Dependence On The Electronic Tools The way in which we store, process, and retrieve information, in other words, our schemas, has been altered by the use of the web. Our dependence on the electronic tools we interact with on a daily basis may have altered how we communicate what we have learned to others. "The traditional manner of structuring argument may have been replaced by a more diffuse manner that parallels the format of web content" (Rusciano & Xia, 2013). Our knowledge structure has moved from print– based to web–based (Rusciano & Xia, 2013) and our use of the web has moved the way our knowledge is organized and shared (Rusciano & Xia, 2013). The traditional form of knowledge is in an indexical linear structure, which "...has formed the basis for the creation of writing, and reached maturity in the linear visual space of the printing press; it remains the core of contemporary knowledge dissemination and acquisition" (Rusciano & Xia, 2013). The web, however, works in an entirely different manner. "...this structure through the web centers on the concept of an associative system of organizing and presenting information that is nonsequential and open–ended" (Rusciano & Xia, 2013). While the Internet is still a fairly new invention, it is not an entirely new concept. Vannevar Bush had a big vision in 1945 of what the power of machines could do for organizing and retrieving information. He dreamt up a device, which he called the memex machine. "Bush's imaginative machine allows for the entire body of human ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...