Arts & Humanities: Philosophy: “Question: Karl Marx?!?” plus 5 more |
- Question: Karl Marx?!?
- Question: Do you believe hope is essential to survive?
- Question: What should I look up for my philosophy topic? (key philosiphers, texts and etc)?
- Question: I hate this world?
- Question: Do you suspect that you may be suffering from the Dunning–Kruger effect?
- Question: Is it wrong to be indifferent to other people?
| Posted: 24 Oct 2015 07:41 AM PDT I'm doing a research paper on Karl Marx and I have two questions. If you could include sources (reliable ones that would be accepted for a research paper) that would be awesome. If not, help is still appreciated. 1) What time period was Karl Marx from? (ie. French Revolution, Antebellum, etc...) 2) In what ways did Karl Marx influence the US government, Constitution, US laws, or American policy? |
| Question: Do you believe hope is essential to survive? Posted: 24 Oct 2015 07:22 AM PDT Good question. I believe hope is essential to survive happily. The basic survival instinct usually kicks in even with the absence of hope. But hope is the driving force in achieving more than mere survival. It gives us the drive to create, discover, and accomplish more. When I'm hopeless I describe the feeling as being an empty shell of a person. It isn't fun. |
| Question: What should I look up for my philosophy topic? (key philosiphers, texts and etc)? Posted: 24 Oct 2015 07:13 AM PDT Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Posted: 24 Oct 2015 06:45 AM PDT Invent the technology to travel to another planet, and the technology to make a permanent self-sufficient habitable environment for yourself on that planet (since none in our solar system are survivable without it). Either that, or get yourself a few million dollars and buy yourself a private island so you don't have to see people. |
| Question: Do you suspect that you may be suffering from the Dunning–Kruger effect? Posted: 24 Oct 2015 03:49 AM PDT Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Question: Is it wrong to be indifferent to other people? Posted: 24 Oct 2015 02:50 AM PDT Our interests and behavioral dispositions are as unique as our fingerprints. Even within a family, one's way of being happy may not be the same with another. One, for example, may find that he is happier when he is in a contemplative mood and his twin brother, steeped in group laughter and fun, may find solitary disposition rather boring. We notice that the differences grow bigger when one has to deal with people from other cultures. http://awate.com/unique-as-our-fingerpri... Humans are free to do what they want, without this freedom there could be no morality. In such a case, no basis for what could be deemed as good or bad behavior in the eyes of a God because without freewill we would just be pre-programmed unable to change or alter what has already been laid out in front of us. There are only two things certain in each one of our lives, we live, and then we die, everything in between is up to the individual. Hard determinism only clouds the mind if we are enslaved to thinking we are free, then those who believe that they have no control over life are going through life making decisions based on what they perceive as pre-determined. To say we have a path set for us is to make us no more than a robot, and because robots cannot discuss topics intelligently and cannot act intelligently in situations proves that theory wrong. We all have identity each human individual is unique even twins are different. Our minds are just as unique as our fingerprints http://www.exampleessays.com/viewpaper/9... Every child is born with a unique set of personality traits. Ask any http://www.enotalone.com/article/5582.ht... We are all individualistic, meaning that we are all different in thinking. Our minds are as different as our finger prints - Significant differences exist between the male and female brains. Although what follows has been meticulously gathered from the research and writings of leading scientists and psychologists, it is by no means a hard and fast rule or description of every man and every woman. Every person is different and unique. That every person is unique and has an intrinsic worth. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_variability Everyone is different no matter what, although there are some people who are similar but not the same. Aristotle once said, "It is the mark of an educated mind to be |
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