Oikos Reciprocity Redistribution Market Polanyi stresses that there is no sense in privileging on mode of circulation in relation to the others. He says: ,,the need for trade of markets is no greater than in the case of reciprocity and redistribution" 1601 Poor Law- Queen Elizabeth I of England Uniform system appointing officals as overseers of the poor Local responsibility Worthy vs. unworthy poor Workhouses- unworthy poor Almshouses- worthy poor Reasons for growing poverty Breakdown of the Feudal system Dissolution of the Monasteries Decline invalues and moral -feed the hungry -give drink to the thirsty -welcome the stranger -clothe the naked -visit the sick -visit the prisoner -bury the dead Land enclosure
and held at a shrine to Zeus on the western coast of Greece in Peloponnesus.The games were held every four years, helpedto unify Greek city-states. A sacred truce was declared during the games, and wars were stopped.Safe passage were given to all traveling to the site, called Olympia, for the season of the games. The site consisted of a stadium and a sacred grove, or Altis, where temples were located.The shrine to Zeus was simple in the early years but as time went by a new larger temple, one worthy of the King of the gods were needed. Between 470 and 460 B.C., construction on a new temple was started. The designer was Libon of Elis and The Temple of Zeus was completed in 456 B.C. This temple followed a design used on many large Grecian temples. Though the temple was considered one of the best examples of the Doric design, it was decided that the temple alone was too simple to be worthy of the King of the gods. To remedy
With its natural beauty and sandy beaches, Nice, is the perfect destination for those who like sun and sea. Nice, is one of the most beautiful cities you will ever see. The main place of interest is the promenade des Anglais, which is a celebrated promenade along the Mediterranean at Nice, France. It is a walkway along the sea, where you can enjoy amazing view and see many luxurious private ships. Another place worthy of visiting is the small street parallel to the promenade des Anglais; leading from Nice's downtown, beginning at Place Massena, and shadowing the promenade towards the airport for a short distance about 4 blocks. This area of the city is off limits to cars, and by eliminating traffic creates a more serene setting. On this small strip tourists can find a fine selection of restaurants, where you can try local cuisine, cafes and small shops for clothing, shoes as well as souvenirs.
Welcome to Tallinn You have probably already heard that Tallinn was chosen to be the Culture Capital of Europe during the year 2011. So, we have already done a great deal of work to make our town worthy of this status. Tallinn is worth visiting not only at the main tourist season, but also out of it. Attractions: · The Medieval Old Town · Kadriorg Park · Tallinn Zoo · Botanical Garden · Rusalka Monument · Marzipan Museum Make sure you build each of these into your programme, you won`t be upset. On the contrary, you`ll be amazed what you`ll see there! Practical information:
.. L: Do you want to learn about about our religion, life, praying and Quran? A: Yes, we want. Is it free? L: Yes, it is free. G: Please, teach us! L: Yes, it's time me to pray the second time. Please, watch carefully. Music is palying! M: The religion is based upon the belief that God is Allah. The followers of Islamic religion, muslims, believe that this revelation to humanity is the flawless word of God. There are six basic beliefs shared by all Muslims: Belief in God, the one and only one worthy of all worship. Belief in the Angels. Belief in the Book (al-Quran / Koran) (sent by God). Belief in all the Prophets and Messengers (sent by God). Belief in the Day of Judgment (Qiyamah) and in the Resurrection. Belief in Fate (Qadar) It is well known that in the USA and the whole world , Islam is the fastest growing- religion. Islam is growing about 2,9% per year. Music stops playing! G: Can you show us again? L: No, I can't, it's prohibited. A: Why?
Why does Marx elevate proletariat? Do you see Wright doing the same? What do you think why? In Karl Marx’s eyes, the society was divided into two classes – the bourgeoisie and the proletariat. He considered bourgeoisie to be the upper class and proletariat the lower class, also known as the working class, which he elevated and believed more in. On the other hand, a man named Erik Olin Wright had a different set of mind. Firstly, Karl Marx thought that proletariat was more powerful than bourgeoisie, because he believed, that if there would be a revolution one day, then it would be carried out by the proletariat. In work, Marx saw a form of human self-expression, which the capitalist mode of production did not allow to develop. He claimed, that the pressure would arise interest in economics and politcs among the proletariats so they could take over power, fight against the injustices the bour...
nothing. Men are allowed to marry many women, numbers from two to fourty, that depends on the specific location. 8-year-old girls are wedded with 38-year-old men. Function of a wife is to give birth, do chores and be shut. In regions, where women are equal to men, the multiple marridge is only a husbands fantasy and selling sex is illegal, are well developed believes and rules, which apply to everyone, to make life worthy for all to live it. No woman complains, or atleast they shouldn't complain, because there are people with bigger problems than a horny boss laying his hands on bodyparts he shouldn't. Only positive side, of the nations where women are without rights, is the fact, that almost any arabian guy can have sex with a random woman, what is far from what's going on here, in the west. Women have the right to choose partners. It is interesting to
He said that the shipman was wise, had seen the world and knew everything about his job and much more (,,Ther nas noon swich from Hulle to Cartage."). I think what the author wants to say is that at that time people were not paying so much attention on simpler people (for example workers) but that was a mistake because there were many bright persons there. They just were not noticed because they weren't born to a higher class. People thought that only the warriors were smart and worthy to be paid attention to. One of the pilgrims was a pardoner. He was described as a dishonest and voracious man. He had blonde hair and he did everything to get money. He carried false relics and with these he made a lot of money. But he called himself a pardoner and I think that he thought what he did was right. (But hood, for jolitee, wered he noon,For it was trussed up in his walet.Hym thoughte he rood al of the newe jet.)
Dr. Brené Brown is a researcher, writer, and professor. She is a member of the research faculty at the University of Houston Graduate College of Social Work, where she has spent the past ten years studying a concept that she calls Wholeheartedness, posing the questions: How do we engage in our lives from a place of authenticity and worthiness? How do we cultivate the courage, compassion, and connection that we need to embrace our imperfections and to recognize that we are enough— that we are worthy of love, belonging, and joy? This book is full of powerful topics such as self-compassion, acceptance, and gratitude. As a researcher, she observed human behavior so she can identify and name the subtle connections, relationships, and patterns that help us make meaning of our thoughts, behaviors, and feelings. In the process of collecting thousands of stories from diverse men and women who lived all over
I do my best to have more skills at the targeted field, therefore I have taken Chemistry supplementary courses, visited a variety of lectures, conferences about nutrition and how to make/calculate human diet. In addition, I keep track of food industry bywatching scientific TV programmes in English to learn about essential vocabulary. My favourites are "Take Five" on WZZM and "How do they do it" on Discovery channel. Besides, I try hardest to have a worthy average grade and graduate with magna cum laude.. Regarded as a persistant person, I will continue to carry out any task until I succeed. I must admit I am a shy person, however, I gladly work in a team. I prefer to listen to the views of others and express mine. In other words, I am always ready to make a compromise for successful collaboration. For instance, during group work, I always have a lot of ideas how the material can be logically presented. Taking into account and respecting
So: The 1. As a step register onto PayPal side. On this link https://www.paypal.com/us/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_registration-run There will be a cell like this there: Your country or region let us put Ez in another place The one under it Your language leave it so on the factory setting. (U.S. English) Then vállasszuk who from among the 3 opportunities Personal Account -ot and push Get Startedre. ! On the appearing sheet got now much kitlteni truth data. (To grant worthy real data) ! Email address : Here grant your real email address. Choose the password : Select a password (there have to be at least 8 characters) First name : Your first name Last name : Your surname City : The city,where you live. State/Province/Region: County name,you are N/A. (it doesn't matter which one you are in) Postal Code : postal code. We would turn up with this, on the appearing side our heaven the go TO MY ACCOUNT-ra The 2. Our step, that register BUX.TO -ra
PROCEDURE IncrementCounter; BEGIN INC(MyCounter); END IncrementCounter; PROCEDURE GetCounterValue(): INTEGER; BEGIN RETURN MyCounter; END GetCounterValue; BEGIN MyCounter := 0; END Counter. Summary OOP can be used to translate from real-world phenomena to program elements (and vice versa). OOP was even invented for the purpose of physical modeling in the Simula-67 programming language. However, not everyone agrees that direct real- world mapping is facilitated by OOP, or is even a worthy goal; Bertrand Meyer argues in Object-Oriented Software Construction that a program is not a model of the world but a model of some part of the world; "Reality is a cousin twice removed". At the same time, some principal limitations of OOP had been noted.
claiming that she made the match herself. An old friend of the family, Mr. George Knightley, does not believe her, but in her certainty she decides that she must also marry off the young rector, Mr. Elton. Among her friends and acquaintances in the large and populous village of Highbury, she begins to notice young Harriet Smith, the pretty illegitimate seventeen-year-old who lives at Mrs. Goddard's boarding school. Determining first to improve Harriet, Emma discourages her interest in worthy Robert Martin of Abbey-Mill Farm, declares that Harriet must be from more genteel parents than his, and fixes upon Harriet as Mr. Elton's future wife. In bringing the two together socially, Emma does a drawing of Harriet which Mr. Elton admires and takes off to London to be framed. This appears so promising to Emma that, when Harriet receives a letter of proposal from Robert Martin, Emma discredits him and actually helps Harriet write a letter of refusal in spite of the fact that Mr
Two childhood friends parted immediately after old Mr.Darcy's death in arguings over money, power and honour (which one Wicham- had less in tons). · Mr. Darcy seemed to be an utterly arrogant, cold- and careless-natured man to strangers. Once you got to know his true nature, you got to know one honest, loyal and fair man, who expressed his disgust for "false pearls" by keeping distance. Even though he so tended to escape from those worthy of his sympathy, too. Still, everything wonderful fascinated him deeply, as a pure soul he didn't lie about his feelings. · Mr. Wickham hid an irresponsible, ungrateful and advantage-taking persona under the mask of a gentleman. A pretty face with a rotten heart, but nothing extraordinary... · Mr. Bingley was one positive character all the way. Nobody could've believed bad things of him
The New Beginning II Morning came yet there was no happiness on the surface. The young man had no idea what to do next after all, he was one of the Royal Soldiers, not a babysitter. The child on his arms seemed so helpless...so innocent... And then he decided something that a few hours ago he`d never do: he will keep the child and raise it to be a worthy worrior who`d once destroy all of the ishues and free this country from the Demons. And so, the baby still asleep, he left the ruins of what was called a city once and moved towards east, where the Royal Palace was situated. By midday he finally reached the White Wall, where was a secret entrance to the Palace`s main hall. The gate keepers waved sleepily when he passed them. The young man decided not to disturb them so he went on in total silence.
· By chance · To persist in sth · To be suspicious of sb/sth · To insist on sth · To one's surprise · The cause of sth · To take care ofsb/sth · To care about sb/sth · To punish sb forsth · The result of sth · to relate sth to sth else · to disapprove of sb/sth · to spend money on sth · a lack of sth · to have a liking for sb/sth · to lack in sth · to be equivalent about sth · to be worthy of sth · an insight into sth · to be confronted with sth · to forgive sb for sth · To rely on sb/sth · To depend on sb/sth · To distinguish between sth and sth · To try on clothes · To result from sth (be the consequence of) KERMO MAISTE · to put the blame on sb · To be vital for sth · to give birth to sb · By boat · To be covered in sth · To be obsessed with sb/sth
The most recent film "The Dark Knight", sequel to "Batman Begins" was unanimously praised as a masterpiece and Heath Ledger's role as the reimagining of Joker was found worthy of an Academy Award. Sources: http://www.superherodb.com http://www.batmanytb.com http://en.wikipedia.org http://www.imdb.com http://images.google.com
Disadvatage of Disapprove of Dispose of Dream of Example of Fond of Frightened of Full of Guilty of Hear of Hope of Idea of Intension of Jealous of Know of Knowledge of Lack of Notice of Opinion of (take a) photograph of Picture of Pleasure of Proud of (keep) a record of Regardless of Remind sb of Reputation of Result of Scared of (be) in search of Short of Shy of Sick of Smell of Sure of Suspicious of Taste of Terrified of Think of Tire of Tired of (be) (at) the top of Typical of Warn sb of Worthy of WITH Acquained with Agree with sb on sth Amused with Angry with sb about sth Angry with sb for doing sth Annoyed with sb about sth Argue with sb about sth Begin with Bored with Busy with Chat with Charge sb with Careless with Communicate with Compare with Comply with (in) connection with Connect with Content with Cope with Correspond with Crowded with Deal with Delighted with Difficulty with Disagree with Disappointed with Dissatisfied with Experiment with Expert with sth Familiar with
sending them to various magazines, enjoying moderate success. Between 1854 and 1856, his work appeared in the national publications, The Comic Times and The Train, as well as smaller magazines like the Whitby Gazette and the Oxford Critic. Most of this output was humorous, sometimes satirical, but his standards and ambitions were exacting. "I do not think I have yet written anything worthy of real publication (in which I do not include the Whitby Gazette or the Oxonian Advertiser), but I do not despair of doing so some day," he wrote in July 1855. In 1856 he published his first piece of work under the name that would make him famous. A romantic poem called "Solitude" appeared in The Train under the authorship of "Lewis Carroll." This pseudonym was a play on his real name;
Think about/of mõtlema Threaten sb with sth ähvardama Throw at viskama (hit) Throw to viskama (catch) Tire of väsitama Tired of väsinud Translate from ...into tõlkima Typical of tüüpiline Upset about-endast väljas Wait for-ootama Warn sb against/about/of-hoiatama (millegi eest) Waste (time/money) on-raiskama Wave at/to sb-lehvitama Weak in/at-nõrk Whisper to-sosistama Wink at sb-silma kinni pigistama Wonder about- pead murdma Worry about-muretsema Worthy of-vääriline Write (letter) to sb- kirjutama kirja kellelegi
motorcycle restorer who had been investigating Renard history (Renard was a small Estonian motorcycle brand at the end of 1930s). [6] Renard is a beautiful name, and I am happy that such an old motorcycle industry legacy is available for us to continue. Due to the Soviet occupation, most historic ties have been broken. If we had not restored the legacy, then most probably the next generation would not have remembered Renard any more. I hope that we are worthy of the name, and that the new company can last for longer than the old company lasted before WWII. The modern company, Renard Ltd, was established in June 2008. [6] 15
Areas of interest include: • Seaport and port services policy • Short sea shipping • Safety and quality shipping • Customs and administrative procedures • EDI The Federation of National Associations of Ship Brokers & Agents (FONASBA) provides a united voice for the world’s ship brokers and agents. Founded in 1969 Essential for sea worthy packiging: shock resistant, avoid moisture, stackable. General cargo can be subdivided: general goods, specific goods and neo bulk. Bulk cargo means weight or measure of item. Some examples of major dry bulk commodities include coal, ore and grain. Break Bulk cargo is transported in bags, boxes, crates, drums, or barrels. Luquid Bulk refers to material in either liquid or granular, particulate form, as a mass of relatively small solids, such as petroleum/crude oil, grain, coal, or gravel.
Then in the years after he realized a nice progression in this event: 6,07 m, 6,93 m, 7,26 m and 7,85 m when he was 17. Trainers pointed out him as a young promise. In fact in 1979 he was allowed to enter the national team and to take part to the Pan-American games in San Juan, Portorico. He arrived 1 hour late (because trainers gave him the wrong program of the games) but judges made him jump anyway after Carl's explanation. And it was really a worthy decision: he placed third with 8,13 m at the last jump. A prophetic measure as it was formerly Owens' world record (which lasted 25 years). Meanwhile he spent part of his time even to train in 100 m and in 1979 he run 10"67. Only boycott prevented him to be at the Olympic games of Moscow the following year. In Eugene he gained the ticket for the long jump (2nd with 8,01 m) and 4x100 m relay (4th in 100 m). He improved a lot in 100 m, running 10"21 s while in the long jump he landed at 8,11 m.
weather, consider visiting in Head to the Isla Verde or Santurce late spring or early summer. neighborhoods of San Juan. Washington D.C and Budapest Why go: One of the most Why go: Budapest is sure to visited cities in the U.S., the be a highlight of any trip to country's capital is filled with a Central/Eastern Europe. The huge number of postcard- city has a lot to offer all types worthy monuments and of travelers with all ranges of buildings. The White budgets. And Budapest House and the Lincoln will keep you occupied with Memorial are here, as well as its thermal baths, mellow a variety of eclectic and coffeehouses, ridiculous walkable neighborhoods. nightlife and pretty much Those on a budget whatever else you can think of.
Habit makes society possible. Act in ways that are compatible with the tupe of person you would like to become. Aitas evolutsiooni teooria tuua psühholoogiasse. Tema pragmaatiline suhtumine viis rakenduspsy kujunemisenie (applied psych.) Ideo-motor - ideas cause behavior, and thus we can control our behavior by controlling our ideas. Habits - learned patterns of behavior. Radical empiricism - all consistent categories of human experience are worthy of study, whether or not they are amanable to the methods of science. Tender-minded: intellektuaalsed, põhimõtetele orienteeritud, optimistlikud, religioossed, idealistlikud, uskusid vabasse tahtesse Thought-minded empiristid, faktidele orienteeritud, materialistlikud, pessimistid, skeptilised, fatalistid James-Lange teooria: the theory that people first respond and then have an emotinal experience.
They are the shahadah (creed), daily prayers (salat), almsgiving (zakah), fasting during Ramadan and the pilgrimage to Mecca (hajj) at least once in a lifetime. The Shia and Sunni sects both agree on the essential details for the performance of these acts. 1) Testimony The Shahadah, which is the basic creed of Islam that must be recited under oath with the specific statement: "I testify that there is none worthy of worship except God and I testify that Muhammad is the Messenger of God." This testament is a foundation for all other beliefs and practices in Islam. Muslims must repeat the shahadah in prayer, and non- Muslims wishing to convert to Islam are required to recite the creed. 2) Prayer Ritual prayers, called alh or alt, must be performed five times a day. Salah is intended to focus the mind on God, and is seen as a personal communication with him that
Core indicators, in general, are: 1) those relevant to most reporters; and 2) of interest to most stakeholders. Additional indicators are viewed as one or more of the following: 1) leading practice in economic, environmental, or social measurement, though currently used by few reporters; 2) providing information of interest to stakeholders who are particularly important to the reporting entity; and 3) deemed worthy of further testing for possible consideration as a future core indicator. Qualitative vs. Quantitative Indicators GRI recognizes the value of both qualitative and quantitative information, and views both as complementary and necessary to presenting a balanced and reasonable picture of an organisation’s economic, environmental, and social performance. Where possible, GRI employs quantitative indicators. However, certain topics, particularly in the field of social
as a branch. Kadriorg Art Museum now exhibits the foreign art collection of the Art Museum of Estonia. At present there are five active branches of the Art Museum of Estonia: Kadriorg Art Museum (Kadriorg Palace and Mikkel Museum), Niguliste Museum, Adamson-Eric Museum, and Kumu Art Museum (the new main building of the Art Museum of Estonia) For the first time during its nearly 100-year-old history, the Art Museum of Estonia has a building that both meets the museum's requirements and is worthy of Estonian art in its collections. Kumu Art Museum is a multifunctional art museum that includes exhibition halls, an auditorium that offers diverse possibilities, and an education centre for children and art lovers of all ages. Collection The collection that consists of 55 823 titles is displayed in the following branches: · the permanent exhibition of classics of Estonian art (18th century II World War), the
And drew the eyes of all the congregation, To watch the fervour of his prayers to heaven; With deep-drawn sighs and great ejaculations, He humbly kissed the earth at every moment; And when I left the church, he ran before me To give me holy water at the door. I learned his poverty, and who he was, By questioning his servant, who is like him, And gave him gifts; but in his modesty He always wanted to return a part. "It is too much," he'd say, "too much by half; I am not worthy of your pity." Then, When I refused to take it back, he'd go, Before my eyes, and give it to the poor. At length heaven bade me take him to my home, And since that day, all seems to prosper here. He censures everything, and for my sake He even takes great interest in my wife; He lets me know who ogles her, and seems Six times as jealous as I am myself. You'd not believe how far his zeal can go: He calls himself a sinner just for trifles; The merest nothing is enough to shock him;
Rituals of the Hajj (pilgrimage) include walking seven times around the Kaaba in Mecca.The Five Pillars of Islam are five practices essential to Sunni Islam. Shi'a Muslims subscribe to eight ritual practices which substantially overlap with the Five Pillars.They are: · The shahadah, which is the basic creed or tenet of Islam: "'ashadu 'all ilha ill llhu wa 'ashadu 'anna muammadan raslullh", or "I testify that there is none worthy of worship except God and I testify that Muhammad is the Messenger of God." This testament is a foundation for all other beliefs and practices in Islam (although technically the Shi'a do not consider the shahadah to be a separate pillar, just a belief). Muslims must repeat the shahadah in prayer, and nonMuslims wishing to convert to Islam are required to recite the creed. · Salah, or ritual prayer, which must be performed five times a day
Anita and Me (1996), Life Isn’t All Ha Ha Hee Hee (1999), The House of Hidden Mothers (2015). Anita and Me – semi-‐autobiography. Young girl named Meena, her role-‐model is her English neighbour Anita, but she is a false role-‐model, not worthy of her admiration. A contradiction between British pop culture and Meena’s grandmother’s ethnic culture, which actually helps develop Meena’s true identity. The novel is witty and funny.
3 My brother and I both play football. 3 a to have b criticising 2A Value and price page 11 4 It didn't rain on either Tuesday or 4 a playing b to teach 1 1 priceless 6 economic Wednesday. 5 a taking b to take 2 pricey 7 profitable 5 None of the shops are open. 3 worthy 8 valuable 3 1 I advised Mike to get an early night. 6 The food was neither cheap nor 4 financial 9 worthless 2 I agreed to give Jenny a lift into good. 5 costly 10 economical town.
The latter period, however, began with some difficulties and serious problems. It is important to note that during the period 1908-2000 Estonian composers wrote 144 symphonies. This great number serves as motivation to confine myself to orchestral works. Moreover, this number may be somewhat larger if we take into account that I have no exact information about the activities of all Estonian composers living outside Estonia. From this uneven and variegated whole I had to choose works worthy of attention. Thus I have had to treat the symphonists in the same manner. I apologise if a colleague does not find his name mentioned. The volume for this extensive work is limited. As the manifold activity of several elder composers still has deep significance today, I have, for the sake of completeness, discussed their other spheres of operation. Symphonic music is divided into two large subsections: instrumental and choral (oratorio and cantata) works
poorer fringe will always exist. Those of us lucky enough to have a conscience, mature enough to see how things really are, must do what we can to help the less fortunate. Obligation to help. How can a rich person help a poor one? By giving some money? Well, can smart, or educated people give education to those needing it? Sometimes just taking the time to discuss things with troubled people is a great favor and aid. I don't have much surplus money to give to worthy causes, yet donate my time freely. I don't pretend to be able to educate in general -- but do know enough about plant life in Seattle to be valuable teaching that. I suppose I could share my plant knowledge with a single student, or several, and it wouldn't make much difference to me. The whole role of apprenticeship and master-apprentice needs to be expanded beyond its present confines of carpentry, masonry, electricity, and the like.
initiate v. to begin; to establish; to take decisive adj. initiated action without help n. initiation n. initiative Syn. launch The newcomer initiated the long citizenship process. Their work shows a lot of initiative. Innovative adj. something newly introduced; creative n. innovator Syn. creative n. innovation This innovative project is worthy of support. There have been many innovations in the field of genetic engineering. narrate v. to tell a story; relate adj. narrative Syn. relate n. narrative n. narration n. narrator Walter Cronkite narrated the documentary film. Her fabricated narrative generated a lot of excitement. nevertheless conj. in spite of that Syn. nonetheless
Similarly to how women were once viewed, children have not been considered as subjects of rights due to their perceived incompetence and irrationality. Currently, children are not considered as being rational and capable of exercising responsibility until the age of majority, the age of 18. However, the adoption of the U.N Convention of the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) in 1989 granted for the first time the recognition for children as worthy individuals with rights of their own. The UNCRC laid the foundation for the potential re-evaluation of our traditional understanding of childhood and the perception of children as primarily objects of the adult world. Since, then the UNCRC has attracted significant scholarly interest from various disciplines and as such a high degree of research has been published in this area already. The increasing sociological interest in children in particular that has provided a new perspective
find that beauty, consistency, order are far more to be maintained in thought and deed, and the same Nature and Reason are careful to do nothing in an improper or unmanly fashion, and in every thought and deed to do or think nothing capriciously. It is from these elements that is forged and fashioned that moral goodness which is the subject of this inquiry -- something that, even though it be not generally ennobled, is still worthy of all honour; and by its own nature, we correctly maintain, it merits praise even though it be praised by none. You see here, Marcus, my son, the very form and as it were the face of Moral Goodness; "and if," as Plato says, "it could be seen with the physical eye, it would awaken a marvellous love of wisdom." But all that is morally right rises from some one of four sources: it is concerned either (1) with the full perception
XV THE WRITER'S JOURNEY ~ THIRD EDITION Christopher Vbgkr QUESTIONS AND CRITICISMS "It takes a great enemy to make a great airplane." — Air Force saying Inevitably, aspects o f the book have been questioned or criticized. I welcome this as a sign the ideas are worthy of argument. I'm sure I've learned more from the challenges than from the positive feedback. W r i t i n g a book may be, as the historian Paul Johnson says, "the only way to study a subject systematically, purposefully and retentively." Harvesting the response, both positive and negative, is part of that study. Since the book came out in 1 9 9 3 I have continued to work in the story end of the movie business, at Disney, Fox, and Paramount. I've had the chance to try out
art thou there, truepenny? Come on—you hear this fellow in the cellarage— Consent to swear. HORATIO Propose the oath, my lord. HAMLET Never to speak of this that you have seen, Swear by my sword. Ghost [Beneath] Swear. HAMLET Hic et ubique? then we'll shift our ground. Come hither, gentlemen, And lay your hands again upon my sword: Never to speak of this that you have heard, Swear by my sword. Ghost [Beneath] Swear. HAMLET Well said, old mole! canst work i' the earth so fast? A worthy pioner! Once more remove, good friends. HORATIO O day and night, but this is wondrous strange! HAMLET 46 And therefore as a stranger give it welcome. There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy. But come; Here, as before, never, so help you mercy, How strange or odd soe'er I bear myself, As I perchance hereafter shall think meet To put an antic disposition on,
and situations. Due to a complete lack of self-awareness, they cannot tell the difference between an event and their reaction to the event. To them, the unhappiness and even the pain itself is out there in the event or situation. Being unconscious of their inner state, they don't even know that they are deeply unhappy, that they are suffering. Sometimes people with such dense pain-bodies become activists fighting for a cause. The cause may indeed be worthy, and they are sometimes successful at first in getting things done; however the negative energy that flows into what they say and do and their unconscious need for enemies and conflict tend to generate increasing opposition to their cause. Usually they also end up creating enemies within their own organization, because wherever they go, they find reasons for feeling bad, and so their pain-body continues to find exactly what it is looking for. ENTERTAINMENT, THE MEDIA, AND THE PAIN-BODY
Wickham for those very dances; and to have Mr. Collins instead! her liveliness had never been worse timed. There was no help for it, however. Mr. Wickham's happiness and her own were perforce delayed a little longer, and Mr. Collins's proposal accepted with as good a grace as she could. She was not the better pleased with his gallantry from the idea it suggested of something more. It now first struck her, that she was selected from among her sisters as worthy of being mistress of Hunsford Parsonage, and of assisting to form a quadrille table at Rosings, in the absence of more eligible visitors. The idea soon reached to conviction, as she observed his increasing civilities toward herself, and heard his frequent attempt at a compliment on her wit and vivacity; and though more astonished than gratified herself by this effect of her charms, it was not long before her mother gave her to
to his earlier promises, even in the face of a family tragedy that would have given him an entirely understandable opt-out excuse: To be true to his traits, he needed to be congruent with those promises. I also believe that the same finding can help explain why the perpetrators of fraud against older populations so often use commitment-and-consistency tactics to snare their prey. Take as evidence a note- worthy study done by the AARP, which became concerned about the increasing incidence (and distressing success) of phone fraud attacks on its over-50 mem- bership. Along with investigators in 12 states, the organization became involved in a sting operation designed to uncover the tricks of phone scammers target- ing the elderly. One result was a trove of transcribed audio tapes of conversa- tions between scammers and their intended victims. An intensive examination
January 1948 show, when I was judging. [...] For those who have never seen a Chocolate they are often smaller in build than the seal or blue point, and their points are of a rich milk chocolate colour. Blue points are very popular in the U.S.A. many of them winning high awards at shows over there, but, although I am open to correction, I have not heard of any chocolates. I only had one of these in my classes at the Danish (Darak) show in 1946, and this was a very poor specimen and hardly worthy to carry on the breed, and was, in all probability a "sport." It had been bought at quite a high price when a kitten as a seal point, and having met the vendor as well as the owner I am of the opinion that neither of them had the slightest idea that it was anything other than the usual seal. While writing this an interesting fact has come to light with regard to chocolate points. Mr. Brian Stirling-Webb, the Hon. Treasurer of the Siamese Cat Club has been making a close
He implied that he thought up the idea of frequency analysis all by himself, but the conception that he set forth is far too matured for that. Nevertheless, his remarkably lucid Latin essay, totaling about 25 manuscript pages, constitutes the West's oldest extant text on cryptanalysis. Only after he had explained how ciphers are solved did he proceed to ways of preventing solution. He capped his work with a cipher of his own invention that he called "worthy of kings" and, like all inventors, claimed was unbreakable. This was the cipher disk that founded poly- alphabeticity. With this invention, the West, which up to this point had equaled but had never surpassed the East in cryptology, took the lead that it has never lost. "I make two circles out of copper plates. One, the larger, is called stationary, the smaller is called movable. The diameter of the stationary plant is one-ninth greater than that of the movable plate. I divide the
intimacy offer interesting opportunities to establish a unique home in many modern towns. Today we consider old wooden apartment buildings to be an important part of our cultural heritage. Every year adds more value and dignity to these old dwellings. True, a respectful attitude to wooden architecture is only a phenomenon of the last couple of decades. During Soviet times, wooden apartment buildings were generally not valued and wooden suburbs were not considered worthy of preservation. Many building were neglected and therefore, many wooden apartment buildings are in a very bad condition today. Also, the modern demands for living environments and the perception of a comfortable home is often completely different from the ideas that dominated decades or centuries ago, when the surviving wooden dwellings were built. Therefore, it is an important job for engineers and architects to assess the technical conditions of the wooden apartment buildings, to
You will immediately begin eliminating activities that are not consistent with where you really want to end up. ■ A KEY TO HAPPINESS A clear definition of your ideal, in any area of your life that is impor- tant to you, is the starting point of making better decisions in the present that will lead to greater success and happiness in the future. As you feel yourself moving toward the achievement of a worthy ideal, you will feel happier and more confident. The more progress you make toward a clear goal or set of ideal conditions, the more energy and enthusiasm you will have. ■ THE DEFINITION OF INTELLIGENCE Some years ago, the Gallup organization interviewed 1,500 very successful men and women in a search for some of the common de- nominators of success. But when they asked them to define “intelli-
work." I reached over and squeezed his hand. "Thank you." "For what?" He shrugged off my gratitude with an elegant wave of his hand. "It's easy to pick apart someone else's life. You know I couldn't get through my rough spots without you." "Which you don't have any of now," I pointed out, shifting the focus to him. "You're about to be splashed across a Times Square billboard. You won't be my secret any longer. Should we upgrade dinner from pizza to something more worthy of the occasion? How about we haul out that case of Cristal Stanton gave us?" "Now you're talking." "Movies? Anything in particular you want to watch?" "Whatever you want. I wouldn't want to screw with your big-dumb-blow-'em-up movie genius." I grinned, feeling better as I'd known I would after an hour with Cary. "You'll let me know if I'm too dense to figure out when you and Trey want to be alone." "Ha! Don't worry about that
He had competed in elite-level rugby in New Zealand but was equally proud, I soon learned, of applying his BSE in exercise physiology to perfecting the female posterior. He told me the story over a bottle of Catena Malbec. His obsession started when he saw a professional samba dancer in Brazil balance tequila shots on top of each butt cheek in a dance club. Lamenting the lack of similar scenes in his own country, he set o on a mission to isolate the best exercises for creating buttocks worthy of tequila shots. By 2000, he had re ned his approach to a science. In four weeks, he took his then-girlfriend, an ethnic Chinese with a surfboardlike pro le, to being voted one of the top 10 sexiest girls out an ethnic Chinese with a surfboardlike pro le, to being voted one of the top 10 sexiest girls out of 39,000 students at the University of Auckland. Total time: four weeks. Other female students constantly asked her how she'd lifted her glutes so high up her hamstrings.
2 usetoomuchmoneydoingor buyingsth 3 choosesbor sthin o meetingor election 4 deservesth 5 keepthinkingaboutproblems 6 becomeoccustomed to sth A p p e n d i x1 (P.1 5 3 ) Sscanreferto p.184of theS'sbookforthesameappendix. W . wait for (v) . warn sb againsVabouVof (v) ' waste (time/money)on (v) . weak in/at (adj). wonder about (v) r worrY abqut (v) ' worthY of (adj) . write to sb (v) b. Explainthat the phrasesin this exerciseare taken from the articleon pp 148-9.Do item 1 with Ssand then Ss work in pairs and completethe exercise. CheckSs'answers. Then,Sschoosefive expressions and make up sentencesusing them. Alternatively, assignthe exerciseas written HW. Ss preparethe sentences for the next lesson.CheckSs'answers.Ss
2 usetoomuchmoneydoingor buyingsth 3 choosesbor sthin o meetingor election 4 deservesth 5 keepthinkingaboutproblems 6 becomeoccustomed to sth A p p e n d i x1 (P.1 5 3 ) Sscanreferto p.184of theS'sbookforthesameappendix. W . wait for (v) . warn sb againsVabouVof (v) ' waste (time/money)on (v) . weak in/at (adj). wonder about (v) r worrY abqut (v) ' worthY of (adj) . write to sb (v) b. Explainthat the phrasesin this exerciseare taken from the articleon pp 148-9.Do item 1 with Ssand then Ss work in pairs and completethe exercise. CheckSs'answers. Then,Sschoosefive expressions and make up sentencesusing them. Alternatively, assignthe exerciseas written HW. Ss preparethe sentences for the next lesson.CheckSs'answers.Ss