Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Philosophy Sections 7.1 & 7.2 Essay

1. What are the requirements for knowledge? 4.What is Plato’s allegory of the cave supposed to demonstrate? Plato’s allegory of the cave is supposed to demonstrate not only the human situation in general but Socrates’ life in particular. Socrates glimpsed the true nature of reality and tried to convince the inhabitants of Athens that they didn’t know what they thought they knew. The objects that cast shadows on the wall represent what Plato considers to be the truly real objects: the forms. 5.What is Descartes’ dream argument? Descartes’ dream argument is as followed: 1) We can’t be certain that we’re not dreaming. 2) If we can’t be certain that we’re not dreaming, we can’t be certain that what we sense is real. 3) If we can’t be certain that what we sense is real, we can’t acquire knowledge through sense experience. 4) Therefore, we can’t acquire knowledge through sense experience. According to Descartes, you can’t rule out the possibility that you’re dreaming so you’re senses can’t give you knowledge of the external world. 8. Why do empiricists believe that there are no synthetic a priori truths? Empiricists believe that there are no synthetic a priori truths because they believe that sense experience is our only source of knowledge of the external world. 9.How does Kant explain the possibility of synthetic a priori truths? Kant explained the possibility of synthetic a priori truths by examining the method of inquiry used by mathematicians. Kant found that what makes it possible for mathematicians to discover such truths is that they study the principles the mind uses to construct mathematical objects. Section 7.2 (3 and 4) 3. What is representative realism? Representative realism is the doctrine that sensations are caused by external objects and that our sensations represent these objects. 4. What is the distinction between primary and secondary qualities? The distinction between primary and secondary qualities is that while secondary qualities exist in the mind not in the actual object, primary qualities are possessed by material objects.

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Blood Brothers Essay

Dear Headteacher and Governors, I am writing in response to the governor’s decision to stop the production of Blood Brothers by Willy Russell. I understand the reasons for this, but I wish to demonstrate how certain themes are an integral part of the play, and that it is not unreasonable for it to be performed by students. One of the biggest issues is the use of swearing in the play. Willy Russell uses the bad language to emphasise the difference between the classes. This is shown when Micky and Eddie first meet and Micky says that he is â€Å"Pissed off. † Edwards’s reaction to this is â€Å"Pissed off? You say smashing things don’t you. † This shows that Eddie doesn’t understand Micky as he thinks he is â€Å"Smashing† Micky on the other hand is using the swearing to express his emotions in the best way he knows. Also, the fact that he has been brought up with so many brothers and sisters who swear makes it second or even first nature for him to swear. There is also the point that Eddie uses bad language in the wrong context. This is demonstrated when he calls his mother a â€Å"Fuck Off† this not only shows the audience that he doesn’t understand how to swear, but it also hint as the fact that Eddie is actually a Johnstone and is showing his true nature. This would play on Mrs Lyons’s mind, as this is the one thing she fears most and has spent many years trying to avoid. Bad language also gives the play a sense of comedy. This is shown when Edward tells his teacher to†Ã¢â‚¬ ¦ take a flying fuck at a rolling doughnut. † This inevitably makes the audience laugh, as this is only the second time they hear him swear and the first time he uses it in the right context. It also leads to him being suspended, which reveals another similarity between him and Micky. A second point that someone may uses to discredit the play is the part when Micky and Eddie go to watch â€Å"Adult Films† this again is an integral part of the play as it shows the growing up and becoming teenagers. This is proven when Edward says â€Å"Listen, we can see how it is done; look the Essolado for one week only, Nymphomaniac Nights and Swedish Au Pairs. † This shows that the pair are eager to learn about subjects that they are interested in, and demonstrates them growing up. Also the names like â€Å"Nymphomaniac Nights† and â€Å"Swedish Au Pairs. † Are subtle and could be much more graphic in there description, and whilst performing the play we don’t actually have to show the film, as we can just simulate it. Two teenagers going to watch an erotic film will almost certainly lead to them discussing it in detail to each other, including them making references to the female body. This once again shows them growing up, but also demonstrates the differences caused by the upbringing. This is shown when Micky stops to talk to Linda, where as Eddie jus continues his chat of â€Å"Tits, Tits, Tits,† whilst oblivious to anything else. This shows that although having enjoyed the film Micky is un-phased and continues to act normally shortly after watching it. Eddie however is constantly going on about the film for quite a while after, showing that he has had a more sheltered upbringing. There are many other themes in the play that can be used against it, but these are far weaker in there argument. One of these is the presence on guns and violence in the play. Children today are exposed to violence from a very young age and guns are just a part of that. Also children play with guns from a young age to, and there fore have become desensitised to the violence. The theme of romance and relationships is relevant to the age group that will be performing the play, and also has the sub-theme of childhood sweethearts. Also the Edward/Linda relationship is realistic and does happen in the real world. Tragedy also plays a big part as the whole play is structured towards it. However as the audience see a small clip at the beginning that shows the end, it doesn’t comes as a surprise. Tragedy is a common ending to many stories. Mrs Johnstone makes a big deal about superstitions in the play, and they set up the ending. This demonstrates a contrast to Mrs Lyons as she thinks that superstitions are stupid and pointless. However the biggest theme in the play is class differences. This is in effect the whole play and shows how children are aware of it at a very young age, but it only really affects them as they get older. I hope I have portrayed my opinion of the play and the decision to stop the production of it.

Monday, July 29, 2019

British Homes

There are 22 million places in Britain # 8212 ; large places and little places, old bungalows and new edifices, houses and flats. ( Americans say apartment but British people say level ) . Many British people love old houses and these are frequently more expensive than modern 1s. They besides love horticulture and you will see gardens everyplace you go: in towns, small towns and out in the state. Some are really little with merely one tree and a few flowers. Others are tremendous with plentifulness of flowers and adequate veggies and fruit trees. Two tierce of the households in Britain own their houses. Millions of these houses are the same with two or three sleeping rooms and a bathroom upstairs, dining room and kitchen downstairs. To pay for their house, place proprietors borrow money from a edifice society and pay back a small every month. There are a great many different sorts of places in Britain, but there are non plenty! It is frequently really hard for immature people to happen a place when they want to get down a household. British places are normally smaller than American places. 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Questions: 1. How many places are at that place in Britain? 2. Two tierces of households own their ain houses, do nt they? 3. What do these households do to pay for houses? 4. Is it hard or easy for immature people to happen a place? 5. What can you state about British places? Vocabulary: proprietor # 8212 ; # 1074 ; # 1083 ; # 1072 ; # 1076 ; # 1077 ; # 1083 ; # 1077 ; # 1094 ; to borrow # 8212 ; # 1079 ; # 1072 ; # 1085 ; # 1080 ; # 1084 ; # 1072 ; # 1090 ; # 1100 ; tremendous # 8212 ; # 1086 ; # 1075 ; # 1088 ; # 1086 ; # 1084 ; # 1085 ; # 1099 ; # 1081 ;

Sunday, July 28, 2019

Impacts of Volunteer Tourism on Host Communities Essay

Impacts of Volunteer Tourism on Host Communities - Essay Example The impact of volunteer tourism on host communities is noticeable. Such activities are associated with many positive sides on the respected society. Volunteer tourism enriches the host community with the blessing and their dream of education. Secondly, economical stability is ensured as they undertake many programs to eradicate poverty. Thirdly, social understanding and mutual relationship with diverse nations are strengthened. Fourthly, many activities are organized to safeguard the environment and the nature. Finally, it raises the health standard of the host communities. On the flip side, numerous adverse effects follow this trend. First of all, problems arise due to the lack of sufficient information about a particular community. Moreover, profit driven organizations or at least a minority of such groups tend to have hidden agenda of their own economical wellbeing. Many volunteer tourists visit the host community merely for entertainment rather than serving the natives. Ultimatel y, social and cultural abomination is likely as the unique culture is forced to follow the other. Volunteer tourism primarily focuses on the different areas of development and upliftment of a particular community. Moreover, profit driven organizations or at least a minority of such groups tend to have hidden agenda of their own economical wellbeing. Many volunteer tourists visit the host community merely for entertainment rather than serving the natives. Ultimately, social and cultural abomination is likely as the unique culture is forced to follow the other. Volunteer tourism primarily focuses on the different areas of development and upliftment of a particular community. These volunteer tourists are skilled in different levels of profession, contributing to the comprehensive development of the host community. Pursuing quality education is one of the most fundamental rights of every community. Volunteer tourism activities are often carried out by educational institutions. Focusing on the communities and their growth, many educational institutions and libraries are established. Understanding the significance of this initiatives Wearing (2001, p. 146) states that â€Å"local community and indi genous people† would have better access to education as many volunteer programs are introduced. The economical benefits enjoyed by the host community are not negligible. The volunteer tourism will result in a comprehensive development. Various training activities given will enhance the efficiency in employment. Moreover, many construction works such as houses, schools and industries are successfully carried out all which contribute to the economic benefits of the host communities. Evidently, maintaining a global social and mutual understanding is made possible as a result of volunteer tourism. This interaction results in keeping a good rapport with many societies and communities thereby easing tensions between them. Having such kind of mutual understanding and socialization alters the whole world into a global village. According to Niche Tourism, it is the groups which understand the diversity of its own culture and common roots enhance better understanding and appreciation (N ovelli 2013, p. 225). Host community also gets adequate respect and recognition from the outside world. As result, good social understanding and harmony can be ensured. Furthermore, many awareness programs are conducted in the host community to protect the environment from all kinds of threats. In order to ensure healthy wellbeing many action are introduced and implemented by the groups in their volunteer vacations. They often keep real and advanced guidelines and instruction regarding the maintenance of the land and healthy atmosphere. Activities organized vary from one location to the other.

Contemporary Issues for Business and Society Assignment - 1

Contemporary Issues for Business and Society - Assignment Example In the current era organisations are making charities, voluntary actions, they are also using energy in a sustainable manner (International, 2006). Global organisations are promoting healthy work atmosphere, compensation and reimbursement policy as per the social and environmental factors. Globalised operational structures are demanding flexible strategic development. Global organisations are making social audit to produce the report to meet the demands of the stakeholders. In the current study, ‘Responsible Management audit’ of Nike is done in terms of meeting the above mentioned challenges. Various UN Global Compact Principles are contrasted on behalf of the Nike and annual ‘Communication on Progress’ report is stated to evaluate the topic (About.nike.com, 2015). UN Global Compact can be defined as a set of strategic guidelines scheme that are aligned to the operations and strategies of global firms. Guidelines are developed as per various factors like the human rights, labour, environment and anti-corruption. These factors are helping organisations to develop sound CSR strategies and maintain the benefits of their stakeholders. These guidelines are developed as per affects of the globalisation (AhÃŒ £mad and Crowther, 2013). Firms are able to maintain increased benefits for their market segment, and business associates. UN Global Compact scheme will increase the use of emerging technologies and feasible investment option in the global market. Henceforth, firms can increase their contribution on the national and international economies and societies. Global organisations like Nike, is facing intense challenge from the diversified social, political and economic factors of the market. Such challenges are restricting profitability and growth in international market (Berliner and Prakash, 2012). In the international footwear and sportswear industry Nike is holding the leading position. The American based multinational manufactures and designs athletic

Saturday, July 27, 2019

The effect of oil and gas on Qatar's economy Research Paper

The effect of oil and gas on Qatar's economy - Research Paper Example The research findings and analysis could be used to determine the influence of the oil and gas sector on the economy of Qatar and the trend of economic performance of the country over the last few decades. Qatar was merely a pearl fishing center until 1940 when the oil and gas fields were explored in the country for production and extraction of oil and natural gas. The oil and gas sector in Qatar is one of the major contributors to the economy of Qatar. The petroleum industry in the oil and gas sector has a share of 60% of the gross domestic product of Qatar. The country earns 85% of its export from the sale of oil and gas extracted in the geographical boundaries of the country. It has been found that the government earns 70% of the total revenues from the oil and gas sector of the country. The oil and gas sector of Qatar has given the country the highest per capita GDP among the nations in the world. Qatar has huge volumes of proven oil and gas reserves amounting to a volume of 15 b illion barrels that is expected to provide a sustainable economic output of the country for the coming 23 years. The natural gas of Qatar amounts to a reserve exceeding 7000 cubic kilometer which forms 5% of the total natural gas reserves in the world. Qatar ranks third in the capacity of natural gas reserves in the world. The economic performance of Qatar over the last decades have been presented below in tabular form in terms of GDP, currency conversion rate with respect to the GDP, inflation index and the per capita income of the country.

Friday, July 26, 2019

GLOBAL FINANCIAL MARKETS - LAW AND PRACTICE Essay

GLOBAL FINANCIAL MARKETS - LAW AND PRACTICE - Essay Example ? According to Kravitt (1998), securitisation works by employing superior knowledge about the behaviour of particular assets with the help of structures that could promote a more efficient management of assets. In most legal systems around the world, securitisation can only be achieved by separating the assets subject to the securitisation from the wealth or the originator, which is in this case, the B Bank of Ruritania. In order to separate the assets subject to securitisation from the wealth of the originator, such assets must be transferred to a special purpose vehicle (SPV). An SPV is a company whose sole purpose is to serve as a financing, holding, servicing, and liquidating assets (Kravitt et.al 1998). The isolation of the assets in securitisation is made to more efficiently deal with the indirect effects of securitisation such as but not limited to the following: (1) the attempt of the parties to the transaction to cause such transfers to be "true sales† thereby effectively eliminating the ability of the originator to call on such assets in the event where the originator becomes bankrupt (2) to cause the "perfection" of the purchasers interest in the assets which are made subj ect to the transfer, (iii) protection on the part of the SPV, its operations and structures to make the SPV "bankruptcy remote"2. Part of the securitization system is the issuance of asset-backed securities (ABS) and the securitisation of receivables. In the case of Milroy v Lord (1862)3, the court ruled that â€Å"it is possible in equity to alienate a right under a contract, such as debt or other chosen action by the means of an equitable assignment or by a declaration of trust†.4 By virtue of this decision of the Court, we can safely say that B Bank can exercise its right to turn the non-liquid assets into marketable securities. As it is, the requisites of the legality of the transaction are hereby fulfilled. Note that since the B Bank of Ruritania may use either the mortgage

Thursday, July 25, 2019

Establishment of a Public Relations Department within a Holiday Resort Essay - 2

Establishment of a Public Relations Department within a Holiday Resort in the Flinders Ranges Promoting Eco-Tourism - Essay Example This paper illustrates that the goal of PR by a corporation is to persuade the investors, public, employees, partners, and stakeholders to uphold a point of view about public relations, its products, leadership or political decisions. Â  Activities involving public relation include speaking at conferences, working with the press, employee communication and winning industry awards. According to Danish Public Relations Association, PR is a management function that tabulates public attitudes; define the interests, procedures, and policies of a company followed by implementing a program of action to win public acceptance and understanding. An establishment of PR department is critical in building the relationship that advance, benefit and promotes the reputation of the Holiday Resort. Being an eco-tourism sector, gaining the confidence of its clients is key, and this is facilitated through marketing the company’s services and product. Improving reputation is a fundamental objecti ve of most organizations. As such, a PR department creates an industrial partnership and strong community translating to increased productivity. The public relation will be vital in maintaining the Holiday Resort’s image and conveying its information to the general public, investors, and customers. A positive perception of Holiday Resort is likely to increase the number of tourists both locally and internationally as it improves its bottom line. The public Relation professionals will work closely with the CEO to craft an overview of how the Holiday Resort will be perceived and assist in planning to design a positive image. Unlike in marketing, the public relation professionals aim at organizing interviews with clients, writing the press release and providing information on the company’s achievements.

Wednesday, July 24, 2019

Convicted offenders are sent to prison as punishment not for Essay

Convicted offenders are sent to prison as punishment not for punishment. What implications does this proposition have for an understanding of prisoners' right - Essay Example In placing a criminal in prison there are many effects that will occur (Carrabine, 14). The process of imprisonment is a means of punishment. A prisoner is disallowed freedom and their life is basically controlled by the routine of the total institution. A total institution can be defined as all aspects of life (eating, recreation, etc.) being conducted in the same place under the same authority. As prisons developed and more research was done, prisons became institutions of reform as well as punishment. Prisoners are given jobs to promote responsibility and a sense of independence. This approach is supposed to enable criminals to re-enter society as a "morally better person." There is also an indirect result that has often occurred during imprisonment. Prison is viewed as a violent environment that breeds a "better criminal." By only socializing with negative and deterrent attitudes the prisoner is not rehabilitated but gains criminal views of society. For this reason it is importan t to understand the significance of capital punishment (Cavanagh, 4). Some believe that serious offenders need to be rehabilitated. If they cannot be, some argue that the death penalty should be considered. The purpose and consequences of prison is an important issue. It is necessary to study the effectiveness of prisons as a place of punishment, reform, and violence that in itself breeds new crime (Morgan, 26). A punishment is just if it recognizes the seriousness of the crime. "Let the punishment fit the crime" is a generally accepted and sound precept. In structuring criminal sentences, society must determine what punishment fits the premeditated taking of innocent human life. To be proportionate to the offence of cold-blooded murder, the penalty for such an offence must acknowledge the inviolability of human life. Without a death penalty, the criminal laws penalties will essentially "top out" and will not

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Family in Europe Coursework Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 1250 words - 6

Family in Europe - Coursework Example This was generally expressed in terms of the father as king over the family. He was the ultimate authority who decided all things and in whose hands the welfare of all rested. However, problems at the state level began to change this dynamic. It was proven again and again that the kings did not necessarily take their paternal duties seriously, allowing many of their ‘children’ to die of disease and starvation. In order to break with these monarchs, it was necessary to break the linkage in people’s minds between the king and the father. This break, once instituted, remained and the political role of the family in terms of defining the operations of the state waned. The idea that the father was the king of the family led to a natural relationship between the king and the father. Viewed as a king, the King of a nation was often too abstract and distant for common people to fully understand or heed allegiance to. However, thinking of the king as the father made him instantly more accessible as his duties became clear in the minds of the populace. While peasants had a very little conception of what a king was required to do in order to make the state operate efficiently, they were able to envision him as the man taking care of all the top-level orders that would be necessary for the running of an efficient estate as the father normally did. This was true whether the estate was a leased cottage on farmland or a grand collection of homes and properties that each had to be maintained. This connection was reinforced by Biblical connection to the tasks laid upon Adam and the analogy between king and God in that each determined the fates of the flock of ‘children’ under him. Adam was given the rulership over all life on earth, highlighting the need for a supreme ‘decider’ while God was the ultimate father in heaven.  

How Smoking in Public Places Is Harmful Essay Example for Free

How Smoking in Public Places Is Harmful Essay Many studies and surveys have been researched and prove rather or not smoking in public places can be harmful to others. Studies have proven that smoking is hazardous to our health. When the person who smokes is active that makes the person that’s near him and inhale the smoke passive smokers However, people have been smoking for many years smoking draws people in by using some type’s advertisement to draw them to smoking. Smoking is not a good habit smoking causes serious health issue to the smokers and also the people around them that inhale the smoke. Cigarette also contains ammonia and other carbons which could cause other respiratory infection and lung cancer. The particles from smoke may cause cancers, emphysema and other side affects. Blood vessels raise blood pressure and give the effects the nervous system, which can lead to reproductive disorders in the long run. Smoking in public places can be harmful to the heart by banding smoking in public places you significantly reduce the risk of heart attacks among the young people and young people and nonsmokers. Studies have proven that by banning smoking in public places that rate of people having heart attacks have been reduced by 26 percent per year. Studies have really proven that smoking in public places can be harmful to our health in many ways even breathing in low doses of cigarette smoke can increase one’s risk of heart attack. Second hand smoke really increases the chance o heart attacks. Smoking in public places is not only harmful for people that don’t smoke nut harmful, to young children and older people. Second hand smoke is extremely harmful to older people and young children. Smoking can be dangerous and deadly rather it’s first hand or second hand smoke the laws banning smoking might convince some people to quit smoking. In conclusion smoking in the public really causes bad health issues. Heart attacks, strokes and other health problem. Smoking cigarettes can be deadly. Cigarettes are known as the silently killer. Smoking should be banned in some public places to help prevent heart attacks and other health issues. Studies have researched and shown how smoking in public places can be harmful to your health.

Monday, July 22, 2019

Starbucks Logistics Essay Example for Free

Starbucks Logistics Essay To help Starbucks on its way to successfully reach the supply chain goals they redefined and changed their distribution and warehousing strategy too. In March 2011 Starbucks signed the agreement with Green Mountain Coffee Roasters to distribute Starbucks coffee and teas for Keurig single-serving systems (2) Green Mountain Coffee Roasters owns the biggest distribution network for the single-serving systems in North America and Starbucks was able to increase their stock prices significantly after singing this deal. Also, leaving out the old partner Kraft Foods out of the distribution of its coffee in supermarkets and grocery shops Starbucks can generate some surplus income and invest it into business (3). Another example of changes in distribution is the intention of Starbucks to capitalize the distribution channels of Tevanna and continue to open more stores in malls tweaking the model (4). The relationship with their long-standing 3 PL partner company OHL has been redefined after Mr.Schultz returned as chief executive and have been improved enormously implementing day-today and peer-to-peer relationship instead of having a relationship ‘within arm reach’ as per Greg Javor, Vce President of Global Logistics for Starbucks Coffee Company (1). The relationships were leveraged to the key levels between the partners and allowed OHL to react quickly and in a more effective way to a changing and Starbucks strategy. Also, the improved communication helped to introduce more innovation into the business and now Starbucks and OHL use voice picking technologies, finger scanning technology and introduced the EDI labeling in their warehousing system. All this definitely allow Starbuck to secure a reliable supply of high-quality products and reduce the cost using all the opportunities, technologies and re-defining their distribution and warehousing objectives. Doing it in a smart way and using effectively integration of various activities for reaching the goals the company not only solves the current problems while recovering after the recession hit but builds a new capabilities and opportunities for expanding business for the future. (1) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aa_C7-W_r18 (2) http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/13/business/13coffee.html?pagewanted=1_r=0ref=starbuckscorporation (3) http://www.gezabottlik.com/310/07_Project20120Report_billyjun_Starbucks20Coffee20Report.pdf (4) http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/11/14/starbucks-to-buy-teavana-for-620-million/?ref=starbuckscorporation

Sunday, July 21, 2019

Music and studying

Music and studying COMPARISON OF STUDYING WITH MUSIC  AND STUDYING IN A SILENT ROOM /  WITHOUT MUSIC OUTLINE INTRODUCTION Hook â€Å" Everybody has that point in their life where you hit a crossroads and you’ve had a bunch of bad days and there’s different ways you can deal with it and the way I dealt with it was just turned completely to music† (Taylor Swift) Background of the research paper Thesis Statement: â€Å" Some Student prefer studying with music while others wants to study in a silent room/place.† BODY / DISCUSION Music What is Music? How music affects our moods? Studying with music How affects our study? Is Music can help you study? Studying in a Silent room or Without music How Affects our study How can affect our moods? CONCLUSION Should you listen to music while Studying? Opinion about Studying with music or without Comparison of Studying with music and Studying in a Silent room / without music INTRODUCTION One of My favorite singer, Taylor Swift said that â€Å"Everybody has that point in their life where you hit a crossroads and you’ve had a bunch of bad days and there’s different ways you can deal with it and the way I dealt with it was just turned completely to music†. Music made lives of people lighter and easier. It can be your company where ever you are. It helps you to bring out the best in you. Listening with music when you are doing something made you feel happy and the eagerness in yourselves. Music helps us to relax and it can help us to motivate ourselves. Sometimes it can activate our creative minds. It can help us too, to discipline our self and at the same time to manage our time properly. Music is one of our daily buddies in life because whenever you go, you can hear/use it and music makes you feel better. Lastly, it can benefit us in studying as they said Music makes our learning more enjoyable and it is a good buddy in memorization. Studying, one of the greatest battle that students are facing, can be so tiring and stressful. But with the modern technology, a lot can be done to help us survive studying one of those is Music. A research found that listening with music before doing something can help us improve our attention, memory and last is our math ability (Doraiswamy, 2012). Some Students prefer studying with music while others want to study in a silent room/ without music. Comparison of Studying with music and Studying in a Silent room / without music DISCUSSION What Music mean to us? Music, it can be so hard to describe but if we are asked how it affects us it is easy to answer. Music can help you to express yourself, it can calm us down, and it can explain the words when it fails it means Music speaks. Music is part of lives even though we realize it or not. The â€Å"Mozart Effect† is a set of research that indicates listening to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Music it can makes us smarter. And it can help the parts of our brain to develop our Language and Reasoning. (Stricker, 2013) I have researched about some comments about â€Å"what is the role / importance of music to our lives?† here are some of the comments: According to Malabika Sen â€Å"If man is the best creation of God then music is the best creation of man. It not only touches the heart but also manifests the implicit humanity and sensitivity which has separated man from animal. Great music for example songs of Rabindranath Tagore both patriotic and spiritual have stirred the whole world. The music of R. N Rahaman in different films have touched millions of souls. Music breaks all divisions of race, religion, cast and creed. It is a wonderful force which can bring and establish international peace, love and brotherhood. What speeches and articles cannot do, the magic of music can do easily and naturally. Infinite salutes to music.† And according also to Laju Lesley â€Å"Music has a universal language and appeal irrespective of the dialect used in it.Music sustains a person in the most difficult phases of life.Music shelters the wounded soul and heals the broken heart.Music fosters friendship and ties hearts forever. If there had been no music (rhythm) it’s doubtful whether the universe would ever have continued to sustain.Music contains all the emotions and sentiments of life.Let music make this world a better place to live. Let guns be replaced by guitars let words of love, unity and harmony be sung instead of rhetoric of hate.† Those two comments made me realize that music has a big part in our lives because it help us in many ways like in our studies, when we are sad it can be our company everywhere. How Music Affect our moods? The Scientist at the University of Missouri found that listening to music can boost a person’s mood simply by upbeat music. In the study that has been conducted, Participants improved their moods when after being told to try to do so, but they only succeeded when they have listened to the upbeat music. But others who simply listened to music without changing their mood, they didn’t report about the increase of happiness. Music isn’t just good in increasing our mood. Another Research, Journal of Consumer Research found that people who are going through a break up or relationship problems they prefer to listen to a music. Studying with a Music The studies have shown that Music there’s a right kind of music that will help you in studying that can help you to concentrate better. It is perfect for studying, doing some home works, and lastly while studying for an exam. It helps you to cut down Distractions and helps you to focus more to your work. (UNC Charlotte and University City, 2014) According to Sheela Doraiswamy the Student were given 5 Serial Recall Test in Different Senarios: â€Å"1. Quiet environment 2. with â€Å"steady state† speech. This means a single word (in this case, â€Å"three†) was repeated for the duration of the test 3. with â€Å"changing state† speech. It means Variety of Words (in this case, random digits from 1-9) were played during the test 4. with â€Å"liked† music, meaning a song of the student’s choice (such as Lady Gaga, Rihanna, or Arcade Fire). Students brought in their own music; the only requirement was that it had to have vocals 5. With â€Å"disliked† music, which in this case was a metal song called â€Å"Thrashers† by Death Angel (all students in the study disliked metal)† The results was surprisingly, found out that there is no significant difference between the scores of those 5 Serial Recalls Test. In other word, even though the student is enjoying or not with a particular music, having it on while they worked was just as distracting as hearing someone talk. The Score in Quiet Environment is higher than others. The Researcher Hypothesize that they will see same results when they will conduct this procedure again using a Reading Comprehension Test. (Doraiswamy, 2012) I conclude that listening to music when we are reviewing for an exam or doing Home works is a Choice because it seems that in general, music with vocals is distracting for us. While instrumental helps you perform well. (Doraiswamy, 2012) Studying without music / in a silent room David Cutler said He noticed that several students are fond of listening to music while doing something. There are Impaired Performance REFERENCES Books Bonds, Mark Evan, (2003). A History of Music in Western Culture, New Jersey, Pearson Education, Inc. Harvard Business School, (2006). The Essentials of Strategy, United States, Press Kennedy, Michael, (2004). Dictionary of Music, Hoo, near Rochester, Oxford University Press Recto, Angel, (2005). Foundations of Education, Sampaloc, Manila, Rex Book Store Wilentz, Sean, (2010). Bob Dylan in America, United States, Doubleday Websites Peter Rutenburg (year not stated). The Importance of Music in Everyone’s Life. Retrieved from https.

Saturday, July 20, 2019

Essay --

Formal Analysis Paper Claude Oscar Monet (1840-1926) was a French painter known for his use of bold color and unusual subject matter. In the 1860’s, Monet joined like-minded artists such as Edgar Degas; to create the movement that became known as Impressionism. Edgar Degas (1834–1917) was also French but born to a wealthy family. He benefitted from traditional training and was not comfortable with the label â€Å"Impressionist† due to this training. This paper intends to analyze Claude Monet’s "The Walk, Woman with a Parasol"(fig. 1), and Edgar Degas’ â€Å"The Little Fourteen–Year–Old Dancer† (fig. 2), through a consideration of composition, use of color, perspective, and brush strokes. Capturing the natural play of light and shadow was a signature theme in all of Monet’s work. In this painting, he positions the light to the right of the woman and boy which leads the viewer’s eye up. He then uses shadows in the parasol, the woman’s face and on the ground to lead the viewer’s eye back down the painting. The deliberate placement of the light and shade is an effective tool that he uses with a lighter touch in the boys clothing, the clouds and notably the grass. This piece showcases Monet’s use of color, which was another one of his signature themes. He uses cool colors to give the painting a tranquil feeling and to help emphasize his subjects, the woman and boy. He stays with the cool color pallet with use of blue in; the sky, the woman’s clothes, the grass and the boy’s clothes. He then incorporates warm colors into the piece with the use of white in the clouds, and in the models’ clothes, the parasol, an d even in the grass. Monet used the highlights of yellow and white to serve as focal points as well as natural highlights... ...al cloth. While the corset appears to be tailored loosely, the tutu seems to fit but it lies limp against the figure’s legs. Despite the use of mixed media, the dancers tights are actually sculpted, not fabric. The ballet slippers are actual shoes coated with wax; the same wax covers the entire sculpture, preserving her and the fragile elements. In Monet’s painting, "The Walk, Woman with a Parasol", the viewer is led through a journey of expressive brushstrokes, color, and the playfulness of light and shadows. He successfully uses his impressionistic brushwork to grasp the viewer’s attention and keeps their interest with his balancing of warm light and the shadowing cool colors. Degas uses his knowledge and study of the human figure to grab the viewer’s attention; he then follows up with his unconventional use of bronze and mixed media to keep their intrest. â€Æ'

biological species concept :: essays research papers fc

Biological Species Concept (BSC) What are biological species? At first glance, this seems like an easy question to answer. Homo sapiens is a species, and so is Canis familaris (dog). Many species can be easily distinguished. When we turn to the technical literature on species, the nature of species becomes much less clear. Biologists offer a dozen definitions of the term "species". These definitions are not fringe accounts of species but prominent definitions in the current biological literature. Philosophers also disagree on the nature of species. Here the concern is the ontological status of species. Some philosophers believe that species are natural kinds. Others maintain that species are particulars or individuals. The concept of species plays an important role both in and outside of biology. Because of the important role of this concept, many biologists proposed definitions for this concept. Over the last few decades, the Biological Species Concept (BSC) has become predominately the dominant species definition used in biology. This concept defines a species as a reproductive community. This though has had much refinement through the years. The earliest precursor to the concept is in Du Rietz (1930) then later Dobzhansky added to this definition in 1937. But even after this the definition was highly restrictive, the definition of a species that is accepted as the Biological Species Concept was founded by Ernst Mayr; â€Å"...groups of actually or potentially interbreeding natural populations which are reproductively isolated from other such groups†. However, this is a definition on what happens in nature. Mayr later amended this definition to include an ecological component; â€Å"... a reproductive community of populations (reproductively isolated from others) that occupies a specific niche in nature. The BSC is greatly accepted among vertebrate zoologists and en tomologists. Two reasons account for this addition to the definition of Biological Species Concept. Firstly, these are the groups that the authors of the BSC worked with (Mayr is an Ornithologist & Dobzhansky has worked mainly with Drosophila). More importantly, Sexual reproduction is the predominate form of reproduction in these groups. It is not coincidental that the BSC is less widely used amongst botanists. Terrestrial plants exhibit much greater diversity in their mode of reproduction than vertebrates and insects. There have been many criticisms of the BSC in its theoretical validity and practical utility. For example, the application of the BSC to a number of groups is problematic because of interspecific hybridization between clearly delimited species.

Friday, July 19, 2019

Donald Trump as a Presidential Candidate Essays -- Trump Should NOT Be

Due to Donald Trump’s lack of political experience, preoccupation with multiple careers, and blatantly self-serving intentions, he should not ever have been considered a reasonable candidate for the presidential election. First of all, Donald Trump is a businessman-not a politician. He received his degree in Economics/Real Estate from the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Finance. In 2007, Forbes Magazine reported his annual earnings in entertainment alone to be $32 million. This would have meant a significant pay cut, had he become United States President. Currently, he is the producer and star of â€Å"The Apprentice,† which has been on air since 2004 (â€Å"The Apprentice†). He holds multiple offices at the Trump Organization, and is also a chairman of Trump Hotels and Casino Resorts, Incorporated (Project Vote Smart). Donald Trump has put his name on products and companies both successful and unsuccessful, including food products, corporations, and a clothing line. Trump once stated that â€Å"The stuff that’s been sent over from China falls apart after a year and a half. It’s crap.† Ironically, the majority of his products are manufactured i n China (Webley, 8). How can we expect a man to keep in touch with an entire country when he can hardly keep in touch with his own business? Donald Trump has had some other losses in business as well, including a failed airline business and multiple bankruptcies in his casinos, among other lost investments. (Webley, 3). This may not have been so damaging, if only Donald Trump had any political experience whatsoever, but he has none (Project Vote Smart). Karl Rove, former President Bush’s chief political advisor, once said that being the President of the United States may b... ...lirtation Meant for "The Apprentice" Ratings? - Political Hotsheet - CBS News." Breaking News Headlines: Business, Entertainment & World News - CBS News. CBS, 19 Apr. 2011. Web. 17 May 2011. DiGiacomo, Frank. "President Trump? The Donald Swapped Party Affiliations for Potential Presidential Bid in 2009." Featured Articles From The New York Daily News. New York Daily News, 15 Feb. 2011. Web. 15 May 2011. Gelman, Andrew and Gary King, â€Å"Why Are America Presidential Election Campaign Polls So Variable When Votes Are So Predictable?† 1993. PDF. Rove, Karl. â€Å"What Makes a Great President.† Lecture. Rocco C. Siciliano Forum, Univ. of Utah. 13 Nov 2002. History News Network. George Mason Univ.’s History News Network, 30 June 2003. Web. 08 May 2011. Webley, Kayla. "Trump Airlines - Top 10 Donald Trump Failures - TIME." TIME.com. Time, 29 Apr. 2011. Web. 15 May 2011.

Thursday, July 18, 2019

A Scrutiny of the Ethical Dilemmas in ‘A Few Good Men’

A young Navy Lawyer named Lt. Daniel Kaffee is in charge of the cases of two Marines, namely: PFC Louden Downey and LCpl Harold Dawson, who have been court-martialed because of allegedly murdering a fellow marine that goes by the name of PFC William T. Santiago (Reiner et. al., 1992).PFC William T. Santiago criticizes the status of Guantanamo Naval Base Bay in terms of its health condition (Reiner et. al., 1992). The top officials ignore his appeals which led him to finally decide on requesting that he be transferred to another Naval Base (Reiner et. al., 1992). As they continue to pay no attention to his complaints, he threatened that he would expose a case of an â€Å"illegal fence-line shooting† if they would not transfer him to another Naval Base (Reiner et. al., 1992).He then sends a letter to Col. Nathan Jessep, the CO of the Marines at the aforementioned base (Reiner et. al., 1992). Col. Nathan Jessep reads it as a way of informing Lt. Col. Matthew Markinson, who is Col . Nathan Jessep’s executive officer and 1st Lt. Jonathan Kendrick, who is the platoon commander of PFC William T. Santiago (Reiner et. al., 1992).Both Col. Nathan Jessep’s subordinates get mad as they were being notified about it but they disagree with the decision of transferring PFC William T. Santiago to another Naval Base (Reiner et. al., 1992). Lt. Col. Matthew Markinson wants to transfer PFC William T. Santiago, however, Col. Nathan Jessep do not agree with it stating that PFC William T. Santiago will be trained there instead (Reiner et. al., 1992).Lt. Daniel Kaffee establishes that PFC Louden Downey and LCpl Harold Dawson were just carrying out the instructions/orders given by Col. Nathan Jessep, as well as, 1st Lt. Jonathan Kendrick (Reiner et. al., 1992). PFC Louden Downey and LCpl Harold Dawson reiterate that they were given instructions to â€Å"give the victim a Code Red† (Reiner et. al., 1992). A â€Å"Code Red† is a â€Å"colloquial termino logy† that pertains to â€Å"extrajudicial punishment† (Reiner et. al., 1992).When Lt. Daniel Kaffee began to infer that he was only specifically picked to be the lead counsel of PFC Louden Downey and LCpl Harold Dawson, he knew immediately the reasons why (Reiner et. al., 1992). It was because he used to engage himself in â€Å"quickly settling cases by plea bargains† (Reiner et. al., 1992).The ones who picked him had two motives for choosing him: number one is to hamper the case of PFC Louden Downey and LCpl Harold Dawson from being tried and number two is to humiliate the Marine Corps which will eventually tarnish Col. Nathan Jessep’s promotion (Reiner et. al., 1992).Fortunately, as the case progresses, Lt. Daniel Kaffee is more motivated to work on the case (Reiner et. al., 1992). He even learned to cooperate and respect LCDR JoAnn Galloway, his partner in defending the case of PFC Louden Downey and LCpl Harold Dawson (Reiner et. al., 1992).In the end, Lt. Daniel Kaffee is successful in defending the case by providing evidence that indeed Col. Nathan Jessep â€Å"ordered a Code Red† to get back at PFC William T. Santiago who has written a letter with regards to a case of an â€Å"illegal fence-line shooting† (Reiner et. al., 1992).As Col. Nathan Jessep confesses that he ordered so, he was arrested and detained while PFC Louden Downey and LCpl Harold Dawson were not charged by the court as â€Å"guilty of murder and conspiracy to commit murder† however, was charged for â€Å"conduct unbecoming of a United States Marine† (Reiner et. al., 1992). PFC Louden Downey and LCpl Harold Dawson were â€Å"dishonorably discharged† because of that (Reiner et. al., 1992).   

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

End of Poverty Guide Essay

Sachs throws step forward the normal airs of thinking ab tabu the pret intercepts of m nullifyi lavatorycy in countries, for instance that pot ar lazy or stupid, or the countries ar non democratic, and that corruption is wide-spread. liter percent of the adult males tribe exists on half-size than iodine dollar mark per daylight. He believes that often sequences of the conundrum is structural, which nooky solely be carryt with by nub of the suspensor of the naughty countries.Sachs believes, first of altogether(prenominal)(prenominal)(prenominal), that on the whole current debt owed by the worthless countries should be discountelectric celled. Secondly, if the gold countries would ready up their ontogeny tending from .2% to .7% in that location would be self-feeder money l terminusable to annex the sparing produceing so that all countries would no longer be natively little.If MAI is to f etc.tera k instantaneouslyn as an agency which teaches a rising way of potfuling with want, consequently we collect to be arise aw atomic go in 18 of this keep and Sachs s thunder muging and admission code to impoverishment. Chapter Twelve really speaks to CHE.I require tried to review what has appe bed to me to be the to a greater extent(prenominal) or less(prenominal) undischarged peaks, chapter by chapter. All chapters ar non treated equally. I in the beginning dothis exercise for myself to process me understand the pasture points from the book. If they ar of any inspection and repair to diametrics, so that is a plus.I discombobulate kaput(p) into more feature in the an different(a)(prenominal) synopsis I contri moreovere through with(p) because of the possible guidance this book undersurface give us for a parvenu paradigm for dealing with distress various(prenominal)ly, locally, issuely and internationally (which in pragmatism we ar already on the street in doing). Some things be rough(prenominal) structural and organizational issues and I am non suggesting that we repulse complex in these, besides wobble essential bewilder at the village level and thus we stomach scale up our strengths from there.Chapter unitaryA Global Family PortraitSachs sets the layer for his thesis and book using examples of Malawi, Bangladesh, India, and china to sharpen distinguishable levels of pauperisation. He talks a just presently the asc cease function of stinting development for countries. Lowest be those who atomic government issue 18 too ill, hungry, or destitute to pee even a foot on the scum bag try forbiddeng of the development snap. They cast up the bottom 1/6 of the orbs universe of discourse, or one zillion flock. They atomic number 18 the deplorableest of the forgetful and spicy on less than $1 a day. A few rungs up the governmental campaign at the upper end of the low-in go in countries ar a nonher 1.5 meg heap. T hey bouncing scarce above the subsistence level. These ii groups make up 40% of the human organisms population. CHE targets twain of these groups, and curiously with the first group. A nonher 2.5 billion include the IT workers of India. intimately of them live in the cities and argon mode set uply unretentive. cardinal billion or one- sixer whateverth of the demesne come from the sloppedly-off developed countries.Sachs says the greatest calamity of our period is that one-sixth of the populations population is non even on the first rung of the ladder. A round number of the derively low in level one ar caught in the leanness trap and bunsnot leakage it. They be trapped by disease, physical cloture off, humour stress, environmental degradation, and organic poorness itself.He breaks mendicancy into terzetto levels Extreme impoverishment elbow room househ olders cannot date basal ineluctably for survival. This merely occurs in ontogenesis countri es. origination posit says their income isless than $1 a day. Mode dictate poverty is where unavoidably atomic number 18 chiefly just barely met. piece Bank says this represents countries where their income tholepins mingled with $1 and $2 per day. Relative poverty generally describes household income level at organism below a given piece of the fair national income. You find this in developed countries.He accordingly presents the quarrel of our Generation which includes soldiers serviceing the poorest of the poor escape the misery of uttermost(a) poverty and uphold them set rarify their climb up the ladder of stinting development. Ensuring all who are the homos poor, including mode dictately poor, con human facer a chance to climb exalteder in stinting development.He believes that the side by side(p) can be done Meet the millennium Development Goals by 2015. End fundamental poverty by 2025. To hold back come up before 2025, that all of the macrocos ms poor countries can make secure approach up the ladder of frugal development. To accomplish this with modest fiscal sustain from the spicyes countries, which testament be more than is now provided per capita.Chapter TwoThe Spread of sparing ProsperitySachs uses some(prenominal) graphs in this chapter. I pull up s resides not go into detail on these, that I leave point stunned some salient points All regions of the universe were poor in 1820. All regions figured frugal progress, though some such(prenominal) more than others. uni pains a shots gameyest regions experienced by out-of-the-way(prenominal) the greatest stinting progress. As an example, Africa has tho gr bear at .7% a division plot of ground the ground furys at 1.7%. This may not seem much, simply when increase year-by-year, it results in the great differences between the devil. The distinction f deed now is not the reassign of income from one region to another, solely preferably tha t the overall increase in the worlds income is happening at contrasting rates in different regions.Until the 1700s, the world was remarkably poor by todays bills. A study change was the industrial first appearance coming to certain(prenominal) regions and not toothers. The steam locomotive engine was a decisive turning point because it mobilized the colossal store of primary null which unbolted the mass doing of goods and serve. youthful energy furnish e rattling(prenominal) aspect of the scotch takeoff.As coal terminateed patience, industry fueled governmental super king. Britains industrial break by elbow room of with(predicate) created a huge jams and fiscal returns. take over Britain to a fault had exist individual initiative and societal mobility than near other countries of the world. They excessively had a change of institution and liberty. Britain alike had a study geographic advantageone of isolation and protection of the sea, in addition to entrance fee to the navals for worldwide transportation for their goods and importation of other countries goods.Sachs and accordingly goes on to outline what has fostered study sparingal harvest- sequence Modern scotch branch is accompanied by batch moving to the cities, or urbanization. This means less and fewer people produce the aliment that is call for for the e assert. Hopefully, forage price per farmer decreases as larger plots are farmed more juicyly. This too means sparsely inhabit make for makes good soul when legion(predicate) farms are asked to grow the crops, nevertheless sparse ground makes little sense when more and more people are engaged in manufacturing in the cities. Modern economical growth fostered a revolution in he artistic creationy mobility which regarded social ranking of people. A fixed social arrangement depends on status quo and farming(prenominal) population. in that respect is a change in sex activity usages wi th economic development. This affects existent conditions as well as family structure. The desired number of youngsterren decreases. The division of cranch increases. By specializing in one activity instead of some, productivity increases.The diffusion of economic growth occurred in three master(prenominal) forms From Britain to its colonies in northmost America, Australia and New Zealand. (It was therefore sexual congressly straight- onward to take out-of-door British technologies, food crops and even court-ordered institutions.) A sustain diffusion took move into within atomic number 63 that ran from westerlyern atomic number 63 to Eastern europium, and from Northern atomic number 63 to grey atomic number 63. The tertiary drift of diffusion was from Europe to Latin America, Africa, and Asia.Sachs believes that the single most grand reason for prosperity spread is the infection of engine room and the caprices underlying it. The good advances came at diff erent times. The first wave turn around the invention of the steam engine which led to movery-producing goods. The second wave in the 19th century was led by the introduction of the rail and telegraph. It excessively include the introduction of steam ships instead of sailing ones, and the construction of the Suez bedal. The third wave was initiated by electrification of industry and urban society. Along with this came the development of the internal combustion engine. The quartetteth wave came in the 20th century with the globularisation of the world due to impudently methods of communication starting in Europe. in that location came a time of a great burst which took assign with the start of solid ground fight I, and grimacetracked economic development for awhile. This led to the prominent De fight downion which led to World warfare II. A fifth wave took place right after World struggle II, and in 1991. It began with the monumental efforts of reconstruction of Europe and Japan right after World War II. Trade barriers began to come down.There were three worlds the first was the developed West, the second was comprised of affectionateist countries, and the third was do up of undeveloped countries (which were made up of the old colony countries). The world therefore progressed on three tracks. The problem was that the second and third worlds did not packet in economic growth and materially went okayward. By closing their economies, they closed themselves off from economic development.So what did this mean to the poorest of the poor countries? They did not begin their economic growth until decades later. They faced geographical barriers of being land-locked They faced the brutal using of the compound powers. They made disastrously magnanimous choices in their national policies.Chapter Threewhy Some Countries FailIn this chapter, Sachs looks at the cause of poverty and possible solutions.He first deals with, how a familys per-capi ta income great poweriness increase The first way is by dint of savings either in bills or similar assets self like(prenominal)(p) animals, etc. The second way is shifting to crops that nonplus a higher(prenominal) damp per hectare, and then adding value to the crop (which is what we teach in our PAD training). The third way is adopting impertinent technology, which improves their productivity. The fourth way is mental imagery boom, which means to move to a much larger and more fertile farm.The flip side of increasing their economic growth is by decreasing their per capita income which is more than just the confrontation of the above agents overleap of savings is of score one way to reduce per capita income. Lack of slew, meaning that a household hears of the in the altogether crop scarcely cannot take advantage of it and stays with what they swing a penny. Technological reversal is when something like HIV hits an area and children lose their parents etc. Natural resource decline is where the land go bads less and less fertile producing less and less crops. Adverse Productivity pique is where a natural disaster hits like a drought, tsunami, earthquake, typhoon, etc. Population growth lessens per capita income where the father has two hectares of land and it is separate among his five sons at his death.Now Sachs begins to get into the true heart of poverty on a uncouth level The poverty trap itself is where poverty is so extreme that the poor do not set some the ability by themselves to get out of the mess. Physical geography plays a study role where countries are land-locked with poor or no roads, a neglect of passable rivers, or situated in riding horse ranges or deserts with an extremely high transportation terms. The low productivity of the land is another factor in the geography. The pecuniary trap is where the government activity lacks the resources to deliver for the holdful infrastructure on which e conomic growth depends. Government stroke happens when the government is not c erstntrating on high priority infrastructure and social service projects. Cultural or religious barriers specially as it relates to gender inequality play a world-shaking role in dampening economic growth. Geopolitics such as trade barriers can impede economic growth. Lack of innovation and technology plays a role if people cannot try pertly things because they cannot risk calamity, or because they do not confuse bills to do so. Sachs believes that over the span of two centuries, the lack of using new technology is why the spicyest and poorest countries attain diverged. He shows a scatter-gram graph screening there is a demographic trap as well. The higher the fecundity rate, the impose rate of economic growth there is in a dry land. When they pee too many children, they cannot apparel in training, nutrition, or wellness, except by chance for the oldest male. One of the best ways to demoralize the number of children per family is through the breeding of the girls.Sachs then goes into detail in putting countries into different classes. He points out that none of the deep countries in North American, Western Europe or East Asia gain failed to grow economically. All the problems lie in the developing world where 45 of these countries had a fall in GDP. Not all of these countries are in sub-Saharan Africa. He also points out that the fossil vegetable oil- exporting and ex-Soviet countries, all high income countries, did not increase their economic growth evenly, earlier because of their dictatorial policy-making structure.He also points out that the most important factor is agriculture. Those countries that use high yield cereals per hectare and that utilise high levels of fertilizers are the poor countries that tended to experience economic growth. In Africa, the land is much less densely populated hardly they use neither high yield cereals nor fertiliz ers and they had falling food production per capita. yet they also have far less roads for transporting extra crops to commercializes and they depend on pelting which is generally more curious than high-producing agricultural countries.He also goes on to point out the next scotch growth is rarely uniformly distri barelyed crosswise a rude area. Governments also fail in their role in allowing growth that might en inscrutable the rich households, while the poorest active in the same area rarely seem to benefit. Another detriment to growth can be culture especially as it relates to women inequality.Chapter FourClinical political deliverance (CE)Sachs compares clinical economics to clinical medicine. He lays out five parameters for Clinical political economy CE is made up of complicated schemes. The failure in one dodging can lead to cascades of failures in other separate of the economy. You therefore need to deal with very broad and triple issues. CE practitioners ne ed to l net the art of clinical diagnosis. The CE practitioner moldiness hone-in on the key underlying causes of economic distress and prescribe enamour remedies that are tailor-made to each sylvans condition. Treatment inevitably to be viewed in family terms, not individual terms. The entire world is position of each boorishs family. If countries work together they can have far more force than running(a) in isolation. Good CE come requires monitoring and evaluation. More than just ask if the goals are being handd, that also asking why? and why not? The development club lacks the requisite respectable and professional standards. Economic development does not take its work with the sense of responsibleness that the task requires. It demands that honest advice be given.He points out where economic development radiation diagram has gone wrong The rich countries say, impoverishment is your own fault. Be like us, have a free market, be entrepreneurial, fiscally respo nsible and your problems bequeath be gone. The IMF period of structural adjustment which supposedly dealt with the four maladies of poor organization, excessive government intervention in the markets, excessive government sp expiry, and too much state self-will were not solved by the IMF ethical drug of belt tightening, privatization, liberalization, and good validation. The responsibility for poverty decrease was assumed to lie only if with poor countries themselves.He then lays out his differential diagnosis for poverty lessening. He believes the millennium Development Goal (MDG) goes a long way in trim down poverty. Once the diagnosis is comp permited, a straight-laced treatment regime must be carried out. In doing differential diagnosis, questions must be asked in each one of the following areas light upon and map the extent of extreme poverty from the household level all the way up through the confederation to the awkward to the state in all areas of life. Th esecond set of questions deals with the economic form _or_ agreement of government framework. The third set deals with the fiscal framework. after part deals with physical geography and human ecology. Fifth, the questions deal with the patterns of organization. History has shown that democracy is not a prerequisite for economic development. Sixth are questions which deal with cultural barriers that hinder economic development. The last are questions that are tie in to geopolitics which involves a estates aegis and relationship with the rest of the world.The next six chapters, five through ten, deal with particular(prenominal) countries that have gone through this process, and their results. His results are quite impressive. I will not deal much with each country, entirely an individual chapter might be of invade to the RC involved if he is interested in such things.Chapter FiveBolivias full(prenominal) Rate of InflationProblemA hyperinflation rate of 3000% (30 times) between July 1984 and July 1985 with a longer term hyperinflation rate of 24,000%.Lessons versed stabilization is a complex process. Ending a large cypher deficit may be the first step but controlling the underlying forces that cause the budget deficit is much more complex. Macroeconomics tools are limited in their power. Successful change requires a combination of technocratic experience, bold political leadership, and broad social participation. Success requires not only bold recovers at home, but also financial help from abroad. silly countries must demand their due.Chapter SixPolands Return to EuropeProblemBy the end of 1989, Poland had partially suspended its supranational debt payments. The economy was suffering from high rate of rising inflation and there was a deepening political crisis.Sachs approach in Poland, as in other countries, was make on five pillars Stabilizationending the high rate of inflation, establishing stability and interchangeable currency. Li beralizationallowing markets to function by legalizing individual(a) economic activity (ending price controls and establishing necessitate laws). Privatization identifying private owners for assets currently held by the state. affable netpensions and other benefits for the elderly and poor were set up. Institutional Harmonizationadopting, step-by-step, the economic laws, procedures, and institutions.Lessons versed He knowing how a countrys fate is crucially hardened by its specific linkages to the rest of the world. over again the importance of the basic guidance conceit for broad-based economic transformation, not to stand exclusively with separate solutions. Saw again the operable possibilities of large-scale thinking He learned not to take no for an adjudicate, press on with your guidance. By the time a country has fallen into deep crisis, it requires some external help to get back on track. This help may be in the form of getting the fundamentals right whic h includes debt cancellation and help to bolster potency in the reforms.Chapter SevenRussias attempt for NormalcyProblemThe Soviet pairing relied almost entirely on its oil and gas exports to earn unconnected exchange, and on its use of oil and gas to run its industrial economy. In the mid- 1980s, the price of oil and gas plummeted and the Soviet fraternitys oil production began to fall.Sachs suggested three actions of the West (but generally they were ignored by the West) A stabilization fund for the ruble. Immediate rest of debt repayment followed by cancellation oftheir debts. A new aid political program for transformation steering on the most vulnerable sectors of the Russian economy.Lesson well-read Despite much hullabaloo and rejection much went right so that at long last Russia became a lopsided market economy, calm focused on oil and gas. Russia has a gigantic land mass which causes it to have few linkages with other nations of the world. Their population dens ities are low and agrarian and food production per hectare re main(prenominal)s low. Over history, 90% of the population has been rural, with cities few and far between. This hinders economic growth. Without comme il faut aid, the political consensus around the reforms was deeply undermined, thereby compromising the reform process.Chapter Eightmainland china Catching Up after a Half Millennium Being insulate Problem chinaware lost its economic and cultural lead that it had in its aboriginal history. Sachs points out five dates which caused this 1434 chinaware had been the proficient superpower. This year Emperor Ming closed China to the rest of the world and stopped their modern ship fleets from going out to the world. 1839 China finally ended its economic isolation. 1898 some(prenominal) young reformers tried to gain power and were stopped. 1911 Ching Dynasty collapsed and by 1916 China was falling into elegant unrest. Their military took control of the empire. 1949 t he rise of the Maoist reason.He then compares China to Russia The Soviet Union and Eastern Europe had immense foreign debt while China did not. China has a large coastline that supported its export growth, while Russia and Eastern Europe do not. China had the benefit of large off-shore Chinese problem communities which acted as foreign couchors, while Russia and Eastern Europe did not. The Soviet was experiencing a drastic decline on their main export product, oil and gas. The Soviet Union had gone besides down the industrialisation road thanChina.Chapter NineIndia Market remediate Which Was the Triumph of Hope Over precaution ProblemIndia was controlled by a logical argument, British East India Company, which was driven by greed, and it did everything to increase profit for the company at the outlay of the country. Though Indias population passim history has been Hindu, vast metrical composition of Muslims and Christians lived in and sometimes dominated the land. In dia had poor political and social structures because the land was broken into many piffling kingdoms governed by many different leaders. In addition, India has the caste-system of stratification of peoples.With independence from the British in 1947, Nehru looked for a path to self- adequacy and democratic socialism. The Green Revolution had a major impact on the country as high yield crops were introduced. By 1994, India now faced four major challenges Reforms mandatory to be extended especially in liberalization and the development of new and better systems. India need to come out firmly in infrastructure India needed to assign more in health and study of its people, especially the lower castes. India needed to figure out how to pay for the needed infrastructure.Lessons Learned The 21st century is likely to be the era when this poor countrys economic development is substantially reversed. The country has announced electricity for all as well as essential health services and drinking irrigate system for everyone. These are achievable goals and the basis for much-needed investiture. The Hindus did not genu growth. The Green Revolution and then market reforms overrode the rigidness of the caste-system and the slow growth of the 1950s and 1960s. India has become increasingly urbanized, thereby further weakening the caste-system. Democracy is wearing away age-old social hierarchies. India has grabbed the potential of the meshwork and IT and is leading the way fordeveloping nations in this regard. Indias varied geography and its miles and miles of shoreline fosters its market position for the manufacture of products.Chapter TenAfrica and the lastProblemThree centuries of slave trade were followed by a century of colonial rule which left Africa bereft of meliorate citizens and leaders, basic infrastructure, and public health facilities. The borders followed unconditional lines, not historical tribal lines which now divided former empires, et hnic groups, ecosystems, watersheds, and resource deposits.The West was not willing to invest in African economic development. rottenness was not the central cause for their economic failure as he showed. In the 1980s, HIV became the worse killer of mankind. In 2001, life expectancy stood at 47 years, while East Asia stood at 69 years, and developed countries at 78 years.Sachs spends time looking at the major diseases of malaria, TB, diarrhea, and HIV. He says poverty causes disease and disease causes poverty.Lessons Learned Good governance and market reform alone are not fitting to generate growth if a country is in a poverty trap. geography has conspired with economics to give Africa a oddly weak hand. Africa lacks navigable rivers with access to the ocean for easy transport and trade. Africa lacks irrigation and depends on rainfall for their crops. Farmers lack access roads, markets, and fertilizers, while soils have been long depleted of their nutrients.Chapter ElevenThe Millennium, 9/11, and the fall in Nations. The beginning part of this chapter deals with the Millennium Development Goals. Sachs says that the goals and consignment to come about them by 2015 convey the hope that extreme poverty, disease, and environmental degradation could be alleviated with the wealth, the new technologies, and global awareness with which weentered the 21st century. He says the first seven goals call for sharp cuts in poverty, disease, and environmental degradation, while the eighth goal is essentially a commitment to global partnership. Because you have all seen them, I am not including them here.Regarding 9/11, he says we need to keep it in perspective. On 9/11, 3000 people died for once and for all, but 10,000 people die each day from diseases that are preventable.He believes we need to denotation the deeper roots of terrorism of which extreme poverty is an important element. The rich world necessarily to turn its efforts to a much greater extent from mi litary strategies to economic development. chairsomebody Franklin Delano Roosevelt spoke of freedoms we were fighting for in WWII and for which we still should be attempting to accomplish liberty of delivery and expression everywhere in the world. Freedom for every someone to worship god in his own way everywhere in the world. Freedom from want which translates into economic development. Freedom from fear which translates into a worldwide reduction in armament, a reduction to such a point that no nation will be in a position to commit an act of physical aggression against any neighbor.One major thing he is suggesting is that the rich countries elevate their giving to .7% of their GNP from the average of .2% it is today. The rest of the chapter is or so President crotch hair and the ground forces policies and actions.Chapter TwelveOn-The-Ground Solutions for Ending distressThis chapter is really talking about CHE, but Sachs does not realize it. He says that the worlds c hallenge is not to bastinado laziness and corruption but or else to take on geographic isolation, disease, photo to climate shocks, etc. with new systems of political responsibility that can get the telephone line done.He talks about a village of less than 1,000 in Hesperian Kenya, in a Sauri sub-location (in Siaya district in Nyanza province) that he visited, which opened his eyes. He set up what we find place after place that they areimpoverished, but they are resourceful and resourceful. Though struggling to survive, presently they are not dispirited but hardened to improve their situation. He then goes on to describe the of necessity of a rural African association, the same type of community that we deal with every day, as shown in the abundance of applications we cop for CHE. A major problem, he feels, is that the farmers do not have the money to buy fertilizer that would impact their crop productivity drastically. Also they have no school or clinic.He then begins to c alculate what it would toll per person to bring a school and teachers, saucer-eyed clinic and staff, medicines, agriculture inputs such as bug and fertilizer, safe drinking water and truthful sanitation, and power transport and communication services. The total cost for Sauri is about $350,000 a year, which converts to $70 a person per year, which could revolutionize the community. If he did CHE, the total cost and per person cost would be greatly reduced. He then goes ahead and extrapolates this up for the country of Kenya to $1.5 billion.At the same time he points out that Kenyas debt service is $600 million a year and that it involve to be sour. But one problem that donors talk about is corruption needing to be eliminated. If countries do not eliminate corruption, they would not be desirable for relief. Also, a budget and attention system need to be invented that will reach the villages and be monitorable, governable, and scalablea set of interventions to ensure good gov ernance on such a historic project. The key to this is to empower village-based community organizations to administrate village services.Most of what he says in this chapter sounds like CHE to me, but we can do it at even a lower cost and we have the experience to mechanism it. That is why I said earlier that we need to talk to Sachs about CHE.He then goes on with this theme but changes the venue from rural to urban in Mumbai, India in a slum community make smack up against the rail line tracks, one-house deep. He points out the outstanding inescapably are not latrines, running water, nor gum elastic from trains, but empowerment so they cannegotiate with the government. He then mentions that some(prenominal) groups have been put and empowered to do this in this community. once more sounds like CHE for urban poor.Sachs says what this community involve is investments in the individual and basic infra-structure that can empower people to be healthier, better educated, and more productive in the work force. CHE deals with the individual side of the equation.He ends this chapter by discussing the problem of scale. He says everything must start with the basic village. The key is connecting these basic units together into a global network that reaches from impoverished communities to the very centers of power and back again. This, too, is what we are talking about when we describe scaling-up and creating a act and then forming it into councils and collaborative groups.He believes the rich world would readily provide the missing monetary resource but they will wonder how to ensure that the money made available would really reach the poor and that there would be results. He says we need a scheme for scaling up the investments that will end poverty, including governance that empowers the poor while memory them accountable. I believe CHE fits his prescription.Chapter Thirteen reservation the enthronisations Needed to End poverty Sachs says the extreme poor lack six kinds of chief city Human outstanding health, nutrition, and skills needed for each person to be productive. Business Capital the machinery, facilities, and motorized transport used in agriculture, industry and services. Infrastructure Capital water and sanitation, airports and sea ports, and telecommunications systems that are deprecative inputs for business productivity. Natural Capital arable land, rubicund soils, biodiversity, and well- functioning ecosystems that provide the environmental services need by human society. world Institutional Capital commercial law, discriminative systems, government services, and policing, that underpin the peaceful and prosperous division of labor. Knowledge Capital the scientific and technological know-how that raises productivity in business output and the promotion of physical and natural capital.He spends several pages on charts showing income flow. He also uses the example of child survival and how it applies to the six kinds of capital. He makes the point that even in the poorest societies, primary education alone is no longer sufficient. He says all youth should have a minimum of 9 years of education. He says technical capacity must be in the whole of society from the bottom up. He talks about adept community health workers and the role they can play. Villages around the world should be helped in adult education involving life and death issues such as HIV.The main challenges now is NOT to show what works in clear villages or districts but rather to scale up what works to compass a whole country, even the world. Again sounds like CHE and where we are going.He goes through several examples where major diseases are being dealt with such as malaria, river blindness, and polio, as well as spread of family stick outning. He also briefly talks about the cell phone revolution by the poor in Bangladesh and how East Asia has established exportation Processing Zones, all of which are ameliorate the li fe of the poorest of poor nations.Chapter FourteenA Global Compact to End PovertyHe says the poorest countries themselves must take disadvantageously the problem of ending poverty and need to devote a greater share of their national resources to accomplish this. Many poor countries pretend to reform while rich countries pretend to help them. The chronic lack of donor financing robs the poor countries of their poverty-fighting zeal. We are stuck in a show play that is not real.There are two sides in a compact. In this compact, there should be the commitment in the rich countries to help all poor countries where the incarnate will to be responsible partners in the endeavor is present. For the other poor countries where authoritarian or corrupt regimes hold sway,the consequences for the population are likely to be tragic but the rich countries have their limits also.He spends time looking at several countries that have Poverty decrease Strategies where some are working and some not. gold coast is a star in his book.He says a true MDG-based poverty reduction strategy would have five parts A Differential Diagnosis which includes identifying policies and investments that the country needs to achieve the MDGs. An Investment political platform which shows the size, timing and costs of the required investments. A Financial Plan to fund the Investment Plan, including the calculation of the MDG financing gap, the portion of the financial needs that donors will have to fill. A Donor Plan which gives multi-year commitments from donors for meeting the MDGs. A Public Management Plan that outlines the mechanisms of governance and public administration that will help implement the expanded public investment plan.During the 1980s and 1990s, the IMF forced Structural readjustment on the poor countries which did not work. The poor were asked to pay all the expenses for new services. They then moved to a compromise called Social Marketing where the poor were asked to pay a portion of the expense. But neither plan worked because the poor did not have enough even to eat, much less pay for electricity.He says a sound management plan should include the following Decentralize. Investments are needed in all the villages and the inside information for what is needed needs to be established at the village level through local committees, not the national capitol or Washington DC. readiness. The public sector lacks the gift to oversee the scaling up process. Training programs for capacity building should be part of the strategy. Information Technology. The use of information technologycomputers, e-mail and unstable phones needs to increase drastically because of the dramatic increase of knowledge that needs to be transmitted. Measurable Benchmarks. every(prenominal) MDG based poverty reduction strategy should be supported by numeric benchmarks tailored to national conditions, needs, and dataavailability. Audits. No country should receive greater s upport unless the money can be audited. observe and Evaluation. Each country must repair to have investments monitored and evaluated.He then goes through the following Global Policies for Poverty Reduction The Debt Crisis. The poorest countries are unable to repay their debt, let alone carry the interest. Therefore, for each country that agrees to the guidelines noted previously, their debt must be cancelled if there is to be true poverty reduction. Global trade Policy. Poor countries need to increase their exports to the rich countries and thereby earn foreign exchange in order to import capital goods from the rich countries. in time trade is not enough. The policy must include both aid and trade. The end of agriculture subsidies is not enough for this to happen. recognition for Development. The poor are likely to be ignored by the international scientific community unless special effort is made to include things that help the poor. It is more critical to identify the prior ity needs for scientific research in relation to the poor than to mobilize the donor community to acantha that research forward. That would include research in tropical agriculture, energy systems, climate forecasting, water management, and sustainable management of ecosystems. Environmental stewardship. The poorest of poor nations are generally innocent victims of major long-term ecosystem degradation. The rich countries must live up to the ecology agreements they have signed. The rich countries will have to give added financial assistance to the poor countries to enable them to deal with the ecosystem problems. The rich countries will have to invest more in climate research.Chapter cardinalCan The Rich Afford to Help the Poor?He asks the question Can the rich countries help the poor?, and his answer is Can they afford not to do so? He gives five reasons that show that the current effort is so modest. The numbers of extremely poor have declined close to 50% two generations ago to 33% a generation ago to 20% today. The goal is to end extreme poverty, not all poverty, and to close the gap between the rich and the poor. Success in ending the poverty trap will be much easier than it appears. Too little has been doneto identify specific, proved, low-cost interventions that can make a difference in living standards and economic growth (CHE does this). The rich world is vastly rich. What seemed out of reach a generation or two ago is now such a small fraction of the vastly expanded income of the rich world. Our tools are more powerful than ever, including computers, internet, mobile phones, etc.He then spends time in doing calculations to show how this can be accomplished. First he starts with the World Bank. They consider that meeting basic needs requires $1.08 per person per day. Currently, the average income of the extremely poor is 77 cents per day, creating a famine of 31 cents per day or $113 per person per year. He then shows that this represents only .6% of a nations GNP. The MDG target which many countries have agree to is .7% of their GNP. Later on, he shows that the USA is only spending .15% for aid to the world.Sachs then spends time on a six-step process to do a needs assessment to come up with the real number needed Identify the package of basic needs. Identify for each country the current unmet needs of the population. Calculate the costs of meeting the unmet needs through investments, taking into account hereafter population growth. Calculate the part of the investments that cant be financed by the country itself. Calculate the MDG financing gap that must be covered by donors. appraise the size of the donor contribution relative to donor income.He proposes that interventions are required to meet the following basic needs Primary education for all children with a designated target ratio of pupils to teachers. Nutrition program for all vulnerable populations. Universal access to anti-malarial bed nets for al l households in regions of malaria transmission. get to to safe drinking water and sanitation. half kilometer of paved roads for every thousand population. Access to modern preparedness fuels and improved cooking stoves to decrease interior air pollution.He states extreme poverty (a lack of access to basic needs) is very different from relative poverty (occupying a place at the bottom of the ladder of income distribution) within rich countries, and goes through a more detailed approach of implementing the six steps.He points out that not all donor assistance is for development. Much is used for emergency relief, care for resettlement of refugees, geopolitical support of particular governments, and help for middle-income countries that have largely ended extreme poverty in their country. Also, only a small portion of development aid real(a)ly helps to finance the intervention package. Much of it goes for technical assistance which is not part of the MDG numbers.He spends time o n the question, Can the USA afford the .7% of their GNP? He responds with a deafening Yes He does this in denary ways, one of which is to show that the increase is only .55%, which would be hardly noticed in the USs average 1.9% increase year-by-year of its GNP.Chapter SixteenMyths and Magic BulletsThis is an interesting chapter because Sachs shoots down commonly held spirits concerning the causes and solutions for poverty. He uses Africa as his shift to do so. Contrary to ordinary conception, Africa has not received great summations of aid. They receive $30 per person per year but only $12 of that in truth went to be used in development in Africa. $5 went to consultants of donor countries, $3 went to food and emergency relief, $4 for servicing Africas debt and $5 for debt relief. In reality, in 2002, only six cents per person went to development. Corruption is the problem which leads to poor governance. By any standard of measure Africas governance is low, but not due to co rruption. African countries governance is no different than other poor countries in the rest of the world. Governance improves as the people become more literate person and more affluent. Secondly, a more affluent country can afford to invest more in governance. There is a democracy deficit. This is also not true. In 2003, 11 countries in Africa were considered free, with 20 more partially free, and 16 not free. This is the same as is engraft in other regions of the world. Democracy does not translate into high-velocity economic growth. Lack of modern values. Again, this is also false. Virtually every society that was once poor has been castigated for being unworthy until its citizens became rich and then their new wealth was explained by their industriousness.He traces this trend in doubled countries. One major factor that does cause change is the change in womens position in society as their economic situation improves, which accelerates the growth. The need for economic fr eedom is not fully true. principally market societies out perform centrally planned economies. This leads to the thought that all is needed is that the people must have the will to liberalize and privatize which is too simplistic. He shows that there is no correlation between the Economic Freedom Index and yearbook growth rate of GDP. The single idea of Mystery of Capital put forth by Hernando de Soto which relates to the security of private lieu including the ability to borrow against it is also incorrect. Most poor hold their assets such as housing and land. There is a shortfall of morals which is thought to be the main cause of HIV in Africa. A study shows that Africa men are no different in the average number of sexual partners they have than any other part of the world. Saving children only to become hungry adults leads to population explosion. Actually it has been shown that the best way to reduce the fertility rate is to increase the economic status. In all parts of the world (except the Middle East) where the fertility rate is over 5 children, those countries are the poorest ones. As children survive, the parents feel less of a need to have more children which is a result of improved economic conditions. A rising tide lifts all boats. This means extreme poverty will take care of itself because economic development will pull all countries along to improvement. A rising improvement does not reach the hinder lands or mountain tops. character red in tooth and claw means that economic improvement is based on survival of the fittest and those who cannot compete fall behind. This is a Darwin thought which seems to still prevail passim the world. Competition and struggle are but one side of the coin which has the other side of trust, cooperation, and collective action.He rejects the doomsayers who give tongue to that ending poverty is impossible. He believes he has identified specific interventions that are needed as well as found ways to plan and im plement them at an affordable rate.Chapter SeventeenWhy We Should Do ItThere are several fallacies which affect the USAs giving The American public greatly overestimates the amount of national funds spent on foreign aid. The US public believes that the government is providing massive amounts of aid. A 2001 survey by the University of doctor showed that people felt that US aid accounted for 20% of the federal budget versus the actual of .15%. That is 24 times smaller than the actual figure. The American public believes that the US military can achieve security for Americans in the absence of a stable world. This has been proven untrue especially with 9/11. There is a fallacy in belief that there is a war of cultures. For many, this relates to biblical prophesy of Armageddon and end times.The problem in the US is not opposition to increase foreign aid but a lack of political leadership to inform the public how little the US does tote up, and then asking the US public to supply more.Hard evidence has established a strong linkage between extreme poverty abroad and threats to national security. As a general proposition, economic failure (an economy stuck in a poverty trap, banking crisis, debt default or hyper-inflation) often leads to a state failure. A CIA Task force looked at state failures between 1954 and 1994 and found that the following three factors were most of import in state failure real high infant mortality rate suggested that overall low levels of material social welfare are a significant factor in state failure. Openness of the economy showed the more economic linkages a country had with the rest of the world, the lower chance of state failure. Democratic countries showed fewer propensities to state failure than authoritarian regimes.He then reviews what the US government has committed to since 9/11 Provide resources to aid countries that have met national reform. Improve effectiveness of the World Bank and other development banks in a cme living standards. Insist on measurable results to ensure that development assistance is actually making a difference in the lives of the worlds poor. Increase the amount of development assistance that is provided in the form of grants, not loans. Since trade and investment are the real engines of economic growth, open societies to vocation and investment. Secure public health. Emphasize education. prolong to aid agricultural development.In reality, little progress has been done by the US to the accomplishment of these goals. But he does spend time discussing where plans were established and that funds were aerodynamic where massive amounts of aid were provided by the USA End of World War II with the Marshall Plan which revitalized Europe and Japan. Jubilee 2000 Drop the Debt Campaign started slow but ended up with large amount of national debt being cancelled in the poorest of countries. The Emergency Plan for HIV is providing $15 billion to fight this pandemic.The bo ttom line of this chapter is, OK, USA and other rich countries, you are saying good things, now addition to the plate and do what you have concur to do.Chapter EighteenOur Generations altercateOur generation is heir to two and a half centuries of economic progress. We can realistically envision a world without extreme poverty by the year 2025 because of technological progress which enables us to meet basic needs on a global scale. We can also achieve a margin above basic needs unprecedented in history. Until the Industrial Revolution, universe had known only unending struggles against famine, pandemic disease, and extreme povertyall heighten by cycles of war, and political despotism.At the same time, Enlightenment thinkers began to envision the possibility of continue social progress in which light and technology could be harnessed to achieve sustained improvements in the organization of social, political,and economic life. He proposes four thinkers which led this movement Tho mas Jefferson and other founders of the American nation led the thought that political institutions could be fashioned consciously to meet the needs of society through a human-made political system. Adam Smith believed that the economic system could similarly be shaped to meet human need and his economic design runs parallel to Jeffersons political designs. Immanuel Kant called for an appropriate global system of governance to end the age-old scourge of war. Science and technology, fueled by human reason can be a sustained force for social improvement and human progress led by Francis Bacon and Marie-Jean-Antoine Condorcet. Condorcet put much emphasis on public education to accomplish the goals.One of the most permanent commitments of the Enlightenment was the idea that social progress should be universal and not limit to a corner of Western Europe. He said now it is our generations turn to help foster the following Political systems that promote human welfare Economic system s that spread the benefits of science, technology, and division of labor to all parts of the world. International cooperation in order to secure a interminable peace. Science and technology, grounded in human rationality, to fuel the continued prospects for improving the human condition.He then spends three or four pages discussing the good and bad points of the Anti-globalization Movement which is taking place. He also spends time discussing three movements which made these kind of changes in the world in their time The end of thralldom The end of Colonization The Civil Rights and Anti-Apartheid MovementHe closes with discussing the next steps which are Commit to ending poverty postdate a plan of action built around the Millennium Development Goals rear the voice of the poor Redeem the role of the United States in the world manner of speaking the IMF and World Bank Strengthen the United Nations Harness global science labor sustainable development Make a personal commitmen t to become involvedSummaryThis is an interesting book with new perspectives for me, and which is beginning to be taken naughtily by the world. I believe, as state earlier, that MAIs role is on-the-ground solutions for ending poverty through CHE which is spelled out in Chapter 12. But, as also noted, we can do it at a far lower cost than he estimates because of our commitment to empowering people to do things on their own and primarily with their own funds.