Category: Scientific method

  • Reasons of Emily’s Tragic Fate in A Rose for Emily

    In William Faulkner’s novel, “A Rose for Emily” Emily is the title character who is depicted as disillusioned with society, totally withdrawn, and a bit odd and outlandish at times. From what we can tell, she never actually receives any type of treatment for her mental health, but she consistently exhibits numerous systems that might…

  • Summary: Hamlet As a Film Interpretation

    Film interpretations are often different from one another depending on the directors. Directors’ interpretations have many variables that differ from film-to-film. Hamlet by William Shakespeare is a classic and well-known play that is an example of one such work that has many interpretations. Kenneth Branagh directs and acts in his own version of Hamlet Act…

  • Time Travel and Slavery: Octavia Butler’s Kindred

    Kindred, by Octavia Butler, explores slavery through a time-traveling experience. The main character, Dana, is thrown into the antebellum south during the height of slavery. Dana is a modern-day African American woman living in Los Angeles. While celebrating her twenty-sixth birthday with her husband, Kevin, Dana is abruptly forced to time travel from the year…

  • Scientific Notation in Daily Life

    Do you know what scientific notation is, how you ever wondered what jobs use it in everyday life? Well read this to find out! Scientific notation is the process of taking a really small or large numbers that are simplified into a equation. An example: 123,000= 10^5 x 1.23. ( a larger number transferred into…

  • “To Kill a Mockingbird” Comparison

    To continue, convergence and divergence can be seen in isolation, which can cause psychological damage, resulting in tragedy. In To Kill a Mockingbird, Boo Radley is a highlight character to reflect the seclusion. In accordance with Scout: “Inside the house lived a malevolent phantom. People said he existed, but Jem and I had never seen…

  • Transcendentalism: Embracing Simplicity, Individualism, and Nature

    Introduction Ralph Waldo Emerson once declared, “Nothing is more simple than greatness; to be simple is to be great.” Emerson’s profound belief in simplicity, individualism, and the profound connection with nature laid the foundation for transcendentalism, a philosophical movement that emerged in the 19th century. This essay explores the principles of transcendentalism and its enduring…

  • Freud’s Psychodynamic Theories: Validity and Cultural Utility

    Freud’s area of interest in delving into psychodynamics is to study personalities: Id, Superego & Ego. These three distinctions help school counselors at a high school level to understand the functions, reactions, and desires of their students in a better light, as Banks states, “Psychoanalytic theory and the works of Freud in the first part…

  • The Color of Water by James McBride

    Ruth’s childhood relationship includes a proof of her bitter separation from her family, which explains the family’s avoidance. Despite her contribution to the current book, Ruth refuses from time to time to recall her troubled past. James describes his mother’s eccentricities, which can be described as both embarrassing and charming, as he discovers her being…

  • The Borderlands La Frontera

    Almost everywhere, feminist theory and movements often push each other. In the YouTube video, the sociologist Patricia Hill Collin not only actively contributes in the black feminist movement, but also develops black feminist ideas. As in the reading and the research of Lorber’s points, “The important point made by multi-ethnic feminism is that the subordinate…

  • The Monkey’s Paw And Aunty Misery: Main Similarities

    The Consequences of a Wish Come True A comparison-contrast essay about “The Monkey’s Paw” and “Aunty Misery” “If a man could have half of his wishes, he would double his troubles(Benjamin Franklin).” All people desire the opportunity to make their wishes come true. However, people are only focused on how to make their wishes come…