| Papers [1-16] of 72 :: [Page 1 of 5] | | Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 —> | Search results on "GRIP STRENGTH": |
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Grip Strength, 2007. An experiment analyzing the relationship between grip strength and gender. 731 words (approx. 2.9 pages), 4 sources, MLA, AU$ 38.95 »
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Abstract This paper presents an experiment that was done in order to test the relationship between grip strength and gender. The paper presents the methods used to do the experiment and the results and concludes with a discussion on the results obtained. The paper concludes that while the results indicate greater grip strength among males than among females, they do not form a conclusive case against the suitability of females for physically demanding situations.
Table of Contents:
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
From the Paper "General knowledge suggests that the average male grip strength is greater than the average female grip strength. When visitors to AnswerBag.com, a popular Q&A site, were asked the question, "are men stronger than women?" each of the six responses indicated a belief that men are stronger (Kovaciny). This was used as a hypothesis: If fourteen subjects consisting of both genders equally represented and of a similar or equivalent average age, then those subjects of the male gender will have demonstrably greater grip strength."
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Max Lucado's "In the Grip of Grace", 2008. This paper is a critique of Max Lucado's work "In the Grip of Grace", with a focus on the opening parable in the story and Lucado's personal views as seen in his work. 770 words (approx. 3.1 pages), 2 sources, APA, AU$ 40.95 »
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Abstract This paper analyzes the work of Max Lucado, "In the Grip of Grace." The author first discusses Lucado's opening parable based on a father and five sons. The author then goes onto criticize it as unnatural and states the firm view that from the characters of the parable who are dismissed as savages, to the people who complain that their parachutes are the wrong color, Lucado manages to write off a great deal of humanity as not worth consideration. While he touts the grace of God, he creates the impression that he, Max Lucado, has a key that no one else has been given.
From the Paper "As an exegesis on Paul's epistle to the Romans, this book is an earnest attempt to expand and illuminate Paul's teaching. While this is one of Lucado's earlier books, it shows that strength of intellect that would carry him through more than fifty books. ("Max Lucado") Unfortunately, it also shows an off-putting stiffness. The parable illustrates this. Comparing Lucado's parable to such parables as the Good Samaritan and the Prodigal Son, Lucado's tale feels strained. Jesus' parables sound reasonable. Consider the opening to the Good Samaritan. 'There was a man who was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, when robbers attacked him, stripped him and beat him up, leaving him half dead.' (Luke 10:25) It is simple and direct, and what comes after follows logically. The characters react in genuinely human ways. The Samaritan shows love for his neighbor, although this man is a stranger. The faithful son is offended when his father responds to the prodigal's return with a feast."
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"Things Fall Apart" ( Chinua Achebe ), 1999. Examines this novel's portrait of a man coming to grips with personal and social turbulence in a colonial African community. 675 words (approx. 2.7 pages), 2 sources, AU$ 34.95 »
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Abstract The era of European imperialism brought together the cultures of Europe with those of many regions considered backward and in need of guidance, and countries like Britain imposed their political, social, and sometimes moral views on different peoples around the world. This process created tension, dissension, and resentment in different groups in these countries.
From the Paper "The era of European imperialism brought together the cultures of Europe with those of many regions considered backward and in need of guidance, and countries like Britain imposed their political, social, and sometimes moral views on different peoples around the world. This process created tension, dissension, and resentment in different groups in these countries. The British may also have left behind certain legal and political structures which have benefited former colonies, but many see the ill effects as having been the greater. A writer like Chinua Achebe in Things Fall Apart offers an inside view of a post-colonial society and of how the colonial era continues to affect that society at every level.
Chinua Achebe approaches his subject matter realistically and expresses a first-hand view of the social milieu of the novel ..."
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Controversial Biological Issues. This paper discusses four bio-ethical issues that have gripped the nation's headlines over the past ten years: stem cell research, cloning human embryos, surrogate motherhood, and animal experimentation. 1,570 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 8 sources, APA, AU$ 75.95 »
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Abstract This paper explains that the pace of human scientific progress proceeds faster than the ability of medical ethicists to cope rationally with scientific developments. The author points out that, while issues of controversy are often framed in 'rights based' or legal terms, medical science must provide some answers as to how to cope ethically with these issues, just as lawyers wrestle with issues of civil rights. The paper states that, even though there is not an issue of genetic connection between the carrying surrogate mother and child, the author believes the problems of the mother's feelings seem to promote more social harm than good and potentially put the child produced from the union at psychological risk.
From the Paper "However, of all of these bioethical controversies, none of them is as old nor strikes as vitally at the question of what has the right to live and die, as the controversy of using animal life to prolong the life of humans. People have experimented with animals for hundreds of years, but the practice did not become widespread until the late 1800's. While animal experimentation has produced considerable benefits to people, it often results in the suffering and death of animals. Often, scientists justify experimentation because animals lack certain attributes compared to humans, such as intelligence, family structure, social bonding, communication skills, and altruism. However, numerous nonhuman animals-among them rats, pigs, dogs, monkeys, and great apes-reason and/or display altruism. There is accumulating evidence that many animals experience the same range of emotions as humans."
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Sue Monk Kidd's "Secret Life of Bees", 2005. This paper discusses Sue Monk Kidd's book, "The Secret Life of Bees", a touching and endearing story of a girl coming to grips with the loss of her mother. 1,025 words (approx. 4.1 pages), 0 sources, AU$ 53.95 »
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Abstract This paper explains that Sue Monk Kidd's book, "The Secret Life of Bees", is a testament to the healing power of love in a young girl's life. The author points out that the book reinforces the understanding of the important role a mother plays in her child's growth. The paper relates that one of the most significant events in the book occurs when Lily's mother dies because the loss of Lily's mother is crucial to the plot and theme of the rest of the book; it is the loss of her mother that leaves Lily motherless and alone.
From the Paper ""The Secret Life of Bees" tells the story of Lily Owens, a young woman reeling from the death of her mother at the age of four. Lily lives with her ornery and dismissive father, and blames herself for her mother's death. She is largely alone in the world, with only the company of a black woman, Rosaleen, who her father has hired to keep up the house, and who ends up being Lily's "stand-in mother". Rosaleen, who has gone into town to register to vote against T. Ray's wishes, insults three of the town's biggest racists by spilling spit onto their shoes. Rosaleen is mistreated by police, and Rosaleen is sent to jail. Lily decides they must escape, and the two women make their way to Tiburon, South Carolina, guided only by the fact that this name is on one of her mother's pictures."
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Sin, 2006. This paper is an evangelical discusses of the concept of sin based on Biblical text and other sources. 4,620 words (approx. 18.5 pages), 24 sources, APA, AU$ 174.95 »
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Abstract This paper explains that sin, which is a very real and terrible fact of human life, is any lack of conformity to the character of God as is revealed in the living and written word. The author points out that sin, no matter the variety or name, not only presents problems to the individual but also its roots can spread to affect adversely the community of the person who practices sin and/or refuses to adhere to God's plan. The paper stresses that, when an individual faces his own sin, repents and is converted; he experiences what is known as conversion, is the centerpiece of evangelical faith and piety, a definite and decisive transformation from sinfulness to salvation. The paper includes several long quotations, many of which are embedded in the text.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
In the Beginning
Problems With/In Sin
Struggles with Sin
Free from Denial
Willing or Not
Roots that Entangle
Solutions for Sin
No Matter the Name?
Getting a Grip Out of Sin's Grip
Temptation to Ignore
Freedom in Facing Sin
Conclusion
Knowing
From the Paper "As sin, a primary problem and enemy of life, purposes to "steal, and to kill, and to destroy," minimizing and mislabeling wrong actions contribute to the seeming verbal annihilation of sin, and in a sense contribute to its deceiving power. In addition, confusion, misunderstandings and disagreements prevail not only in theological circles but also among laypersons, churched or not, "as to what should be the content or connotation of the term 'sin,' and that, consequently, considerable misunderstanding and confusion prevails in theological discussions dealing with the doctrine of sin."'
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Ethical Decision Making in the Business World, 2004. Examines why business ethics is not an oxymoron. 1,218 words (approx. 4.9 pages), 2 sources, APA, AU$ 60.95 »
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Abstract In light of the current scandals that have gripped the world?s economic headlines and reduced the overall levels of trust in the nation?s business leaders, ethical decision making has become a hot-button issue, both in the halls of academia, where MBAs receive their educations, and also in the everyday language of decision makers in the fields of business administration. This paper shows that what is so potent about the examples of Enron and WorldCom, among other companies accused of fraudulent and criminal business ethics, as well as of Martha Stewart, a brand name as well as an example of 'housewifery gone corporate logo', is that bad ethics can be bad business. When ethical scandals grip a company, that company?s future and good name can be destroyed. The paper shows, therefore, that the idea that the only ethical query someone need ask him or herself when engaged in a business transaction is ?will it make money for the company I work for? is a fallacy.
From the Paper "Thus, the elements of an ethically defensible decision cannot always be quantified, although they must always be legal, if for only to ensure the continued financial survival of the company. However, for decisions that are ethical and financial in nature, rather than legal, there is no exact calculus, only the need to examine the implications of various options from a multitude of self-interests and perspectives, rather than simply one?s own."
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"Resource Wars", 2005. This paper discusses Michael T. Klare's "Resource Wars", which takes the old ideas of imperialism and the liberal economy and places them in the modern world, confronted with immediate shortages and conflicts surrounding of natural resources. 2,990 words (approx. 12.0 pages), 5 sources, APA, AU$ 128.95 »
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Abstract This paper explains that Michael T. Klare in his book "Resource Wars" states that, although society is often blinded by religious and political propaganda, the ultimate fight is for economic stability. The author points out that, using this argument, many of the United States' recent international policies supposedly aimed at the spreading of freedom can more accurately be seen as the United States acting to tighten its grip upon the world's oil supply. The author of this paper believes that Klare's argument vitally falls short because he contents himself merely to identify the root causes of future conflicts and provides few avenues for the avoidance of bloodshed. The paper aalso discusses whether alternative sources of energy can be utilized and the current supplies of water can be better distributed.
From the Paper "The core notion that privatization of the world's water supplies alone can solve the impending water crisis is likely to be false: "Water would be allocated more efficiently and wasted less if its allocation could be based on clear prices established by demand and supply. But the argument is also a bit too simplistic. Water is not a commodity like any other. Rather, it is inherently susceptible to market failure-that is, unfettered markets often will fail to allocate it optimally." Still, the claim that individual governments can remain capable of distributing water efficiently and free of pollutants is likely to be equally fallacious. The moral consequences of pricing water-essentially, placing a monetary value on life-although rather compelling and moving, remain unrealistically placed in a world threatening to reach a population of nine billion by 2050, and concurrently struggling to maintain stable economies and governments."
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"Ordinary People", 2003. Discusses the film "Ordinary People", directed by Robert Redford. 690 words (approx. 2.8 pages), 3 sources, APA, AU$ 34.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses the 1980 film "Ordinary People", Robert Redford's directorial debut. It looks at the major theme of family dysfunction, the deterioration of a family after the accidental death of the eldest son, and how father and son come to grips with it, but not the mother.
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Benjamin and Social Movements Today, 2007. An application of Walter Benjamin's Arcades Project and Konvolutes to contemporary social movements. 3,194 words (approx. 12.8 pages), 11 sources, MLA, AU$ 134.95 »
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Abstract The paper describes Walter Benjamin as an important German literary critic and philosopher who provided a means by which emerging social trends could be discerned through a careful and insightful analysis of various aspects of a capitalistic society. Benjamin maintained that his Konvolute framework provided a means to recognize and appreciate such social trends and this paper updates The Arcades Project into the 21st century and applies his Konvolutes to the contemporary social movements that are emerging in the United States. The paper concludes that America is faced with some unique challenges to its survival and all of the stakeholders - including illegal aliens who live there - are going to have to come to grips with the new realities of life in a multicultural America.
Outline:
Introduction
Review and Discussion
Conclusion
From the Paper ""People-watching" has always been a popular pastime for many people, but Walter Benjamin used this technique and others to elucidate a number of influential but largely incomplete thoughts concerning the capitalist origins of modern Western society and how these forces affect the social movements that have emerged over the years. In an increasingly multicultural society, understanding how and why other people behave the way they do has assumed a new level of importance today. In fact, in recent years, people in the United States have been forced to face a number of harsh realities, with one of the most pressing and poignant of these issues being illegal immigration and its impact on the nation's security and employment."
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Fanatical Religious Literature, 2005. This paper reviews two examples of fanatical religious literature: Sheri Reynolds' "The Rapture of Canaan" and Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Letter". 1,760 words (approx. 7.0 pages), 2 sources, MLA, AU$ 82.95 »
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Abstract This paper explains that, when fanatical and out-dated views of religion and life, emphasizing the fear of eternal punishment, are pushed obsessively on children, this far too strict child-rearing results in tormented children who become adults such as Ninah in Sheri Reynolds' "The Rapture of Canaan" and Hester in Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Letter". The author points out that Ninah is confused and tormented sexually and socially by her guilt juxtaposed with her human desire for sensual attention. The paper relates that Hester fights back against the curse of the community, which gave her the letter "A" on her chest, by keeping her child and her sanity, while the community and law enforcement seems bizarre and lacking any kind of stable grip on their professed values.
Table of Contents
Introduction to "The Rapture of Canaan"
Thesis
"The Rapture of Canaan"
"The Scarlet Letter"
From the Paper "Mr. Dimmesdale's guilt had seemed to have been well established through the lines of narrative, as to his role in Hester's "guilt" as to having a child out of wedlock; and she nonetheless is a strong person. She feels compelled to help Dimmesdale, which clearly shows that she has overcome the emotional demise she was thrust into at the outset of the novel. "With her knowledge of a train of circumstances hidden from all others, she could readily infer that, besides the legitimate action of his own conscience, a terrible machinery had been brought to bear, and was still operating, on Mr. Dimmesdale's well-being and repose.""
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Terrorism, 2005. This extensive paper analyzes terrorism and argues against the approach of the Bush administration. 8,430 words (approx. 33.7 pages), 40 sources, APA, AU$ 259.95 »
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Abstract This paper explains that, because the wide variety of destructive avenues and methodologies opening up to modern terrorists are so numerous, the nature of terrorist threats appear intangible and too general to efficiently combat or even to comprehend. The author states that the U.S. policy regarding war and terrorism has continued to be a search for ways to generate immediate and short term gains at the expense of the rest of the world. Essentially, the U. S. continues the pursuit of a neo-imperialist empire to maintain its grip upon the planet's resources. The paper suggests that there may never be a preventative cure for all forms of terrorism, but a governmental policy that soothes international and inter-social disputes may eliminate the desire of individuals to inflict pain and death upon others.
From the Paper "The war is further devalued by the incongruity between international laws regarding terrorism, the United States' definition of terrorism, and the subsequent methods by which the U.S. has endeavored to fight terrorism. Fusing these notions together suggests that the United States government is almost as guilty of terrorist acts as the leaders of the Al Qaeda; the primary difference being that, with the United States, there is usually an intermediary involved, and it is not apparent that any acts engaged in by the government could be perceived as acts of terror for the purpose of global demonstration-any association with terrorism has been in connection with a substantive goal."
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Thomas Hobbes and John Locke, 2005. This paper relates that Thomas Hobbes and John Locke represent opposite ends of the spectrum of seventeenth century political philosophy. 3,050 words (approx. 12.2 pages), 9 sources, MLA, AU$ 130.95 »
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Abstract This paper explains that Thomas Hobbes, who believed that man was cruel and evil by nature, espoused the idea that only the firm grip of an absolute authority would be successful in governing a society of men; countering this extreme view, John Locke put forth the idea that man was rational and peace-seeking by nature and that any useful system of government must be chosen by men and must serve the best interests of the polity. The author points out that, despite these difference, both philosophers argued their cases within the same terms of debate; both (1) spoke of social contracts and of the nature of man, (2) were concerned with defining the type of government that would be best suited to govern societies, as well as the reasons why man should submit to any form of government at all and (3) were concerned with the ultimate objective of avoiding conflict and violence and thereby assisting their fellow men in the task of peaceful coexistence. The paper summarizes that Hobbes had a dimmer view of mankind than Locke because, in the Hobbesian world, every man is preoccupied with the task of survival and will do anything to meet his goal of self-preservation; whereas, Locke expounds on mankind's virtues and on his innate sense of morality.
From the Paper "Locke argued a final, crucial point in direct dispute against Hobbes: that man has the natural right to quit government. Locke envisioned Hobbes' ideal of government-by-force as a counterproductive hunting match: "Whereas by supposing they have given up themselves to the absolute arbitrary power and will of a legislator, they have disarmed themselves, and armed him to make a prey of them when he pleases..." Man has thus, in constructing and submitting to an absolute authority, theoretically turned over every one of his natural rights. Where Hobbes wrote that man had a right to quit government only when it was matter of laying down one's life for no just cause, Locke leaves this self-eject option much broader. He even goes so far as to say that when a government begins to fail its people, and undermine its primary intent, the citizens subject to it have not only a right but an obligation to revolt against its power."
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1960s, The Age of Revolution, 2005. A discussion regarding the cultural transformation of Western society in the 1960s, with a special emphasis upon America. 2,025 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 4 sources, AU$ 116.95 »
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Abstract The following paper examines the cultural transformation that gripped Western and particularly American society during the 1960s. Chiefly, the paper examines the iconoclasm of the decade, the reaction against the "military-industrial" establishment, and the changing sexual roles and attitudes of the period. In closing, the paper suggests that the decade was a testament to the vibrancy of American culture.
From the Paper "More so than any other decade of the twentieth century, he 1960s changed Western European and American society. From a loosening of moral strictures to anti-war protests to a re-definition of how American young people saw themselves in relationship to their government, the decade ushered in a new age and a new youth movement. The following paper will argue that the Sixties (particularly in America) was characterized by a transformation in sexual behavior, family and race relationships, attitudes towards authority, ideals and values. It was not an economic or political revolution, per se, but a cultural one (a seismic shift in attitude above all else) that touched all areas of American life. "
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"Killing the Bear", 2006. Examines the symbol of the bear in this story by Judith Minty. 1,028 words (approx. 4.1 pages), 1 source, MLA, AU$ 53.95 »
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Abstract Often things that we experience as children impact the way we develop as adults. The paper shows that in Judith Minty's "Killing the Bear," a woman painfully comes to grips with a loss of security from her childhood. She combines the past and present, representing her great loss as a bear that she has come into contact with. The paper shows that in order for her to regain her security and power as an adult, she must defeat the bear, which is a symbol of her loss.
From the Paper "Over time, the woman has developed an obsession with bears, both healthy and unhealthy. She gathers information about people honoring and worshiping the animal: the Gilyak tribe honors him, Ainus women suckle the cubs, in Lapland he was the King of Beasts. (91) Yet, she also collects stories which show the bear as a cold-blooded killer, and always with the use of its claws. In the travelogue about Alaska, "his claws stretched out like fingers" and "with the sweep of a paw, he split open the head of the other" (91)."
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Polish Holocaust Literature, 2005. This paper analyzes Polish-centered Holocaust literature and films and compares them to similar Holocaust literature from other countries. 2,200 words (approx. 8.8 pages), 7 sources, MLA, AU$ 99.95 »
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Abstract This paper explains that, in analyzing Polish-centered Holocaust literature and films, it becomes clear that certain themes are recurrent: Imagination vs. reality, exposure vs. nakedness, the inversion of Biblical meaning and of human order in general, pre-destined catastrophe and the appropriateness of humor. The author states that the Polish-centered themes are more vivid and their representation more graphically intense than the general writing about the Holocaust because of the concentration of death camps and the density of its tragedy; Poland is often perceived as the "ground zero" and the pivotal point by which Holocaust writers come to grips with the slaughter of the Jews and others. The paper analyzes many examples of Polish Holocaust literature: Alfred Andersch' "Efraim's Book", Arnold Wesker's " Sophie's Choice", Pierre Gascar's "Seasons of the Dead", Claude Lanzmann's film/ quasi-documentary "Shoah", Aaron Appelfeld's novella "Badenheim 1939", K. Tsetnik's "Salamandra", Henri Raczymow's "Un Cris sans Voix", Emanuel Ringelbaum's "Notes from the Warsaw Ghetto" and the Academy Award winning movie "Life is Beautiful".
From the Paper "In Shoah literature, certain questions present themselves again and again: Do these themes - which often reflect a universal character of sort - diminish the particular suffering and injustice of the event? Can any writing truly capture the enormous moral crimes of the Holocaust? Sparking a hotly-discussed debate, Theodor Adorno wrote that poetic treatments of the Shoah were a form of "barbarism." In light of this criticism, it has often been asked by both writers and critics alike, what justification does a writer have for treating the subject matter at all? This charge has seldom been directed at any other subject of fiction, but it might be argued that such outrageous criticism is simply evidence of the subject's moral and tragic dimensions."
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