Saturday, August 22, 2020

Biography of Chandragupta Maurya, Indian Emperor

Life story of Chandragupta Maurya, Indian Emperor Chandragupta Maurya (c. 340â€c. 297 BCE) was an Indian ruler who established the Maurya Empire, which quickly extended across quite a bit of India into cutting edge Pakistan. Maurya battled with Alexander the Great, who attacked the Indian realm in 326 BCE, and kept the Macedonian lord from overcoming the most distant side of the Ganges. Maurya proceeded to join practically all of what is presently India and destruction Alexanders replacements. Quick Facts: Chandragupta Maurya Known For: Maurya joined antiquated India under the Maurya Empire in 322 BCE.Born: c. 340 BCEDied: 297 BCE in Shravanabelagola, Maurya EmpireSpouse: DurdharaChildren: Bindusara Early Life Chandragupta Maurya was purportedly conceived in Patna (in the cutting edge Bihar province of India) at some point around 340 BCE. Researchers are unsure of certain insights regarding his life. For instance, a few writings guarantee that both of Chandragupta’s guardians were of the Kshatriya (warrior or sovereign) rank, while others express that his dad was a ruler and his mom a house keeper from the modest Shudra (worker) station. It appears to be likely that Maurys father was Prince Sarvarthasiddhi of the Nanda Kingdom. Chandragupta’s grandson, Ashoka the Great, later asserted a blood relationship to Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, however this case is unverified. We know basically nothing about Chandragupta Maurya’s adolescence and youth before he took on the Nanda Empire, which bolsters the theory that he was of humble starting point no records about him exist until he established the Maurya Empire. Maurya Empire Chandragupta was daring and alluring a conceived pioneer. The youngster went to the consideration of a renowned Brahmin researcher, Chanakya, who stored up resentment toward the Nanda. Chanakya started to prep Chandragupta to vanquish and govern in the spot of the Nanda head by showing him strategies through various Hindu sutras and helping him raise a military. Chandragupta aligned himself to the ruler of a mountain realm maybe the equivalent Puru who had been crushed however saved by Alexander-and set out to vanquish the Nanda. At first, the upstart’s armed force was repelled, yet after a long arrangement of fights Chandragupta’s powers laid attack to the Nanda capital at Pataliputra. In 321 BCE the capital fell, and 20-year-old Chandragupta Maurya began his own realm. It was named the Maurya Empire. Chandragupta’s new realm extended based on what is currently Afghanistanâ in the west to Myanmar (Burma) in the east, and from Jammu and Kashmir in the north to the Deccan Plateau in the south. Chanakya filled in as what might be compared to an executive in the youngster government. At the point when Alexander the Great passed on in 323 BCE, his commanders split his domain into satrapiesâ so that every one of them would have a region to control, however by around 316, Chandragupta Maurya had the option to overcome and consolidate the entirety of the satrapies in the mountains of Central Asia, stretching out his realm to the edge of what is currently Iran, Tajikistan, and Kyrgyzstan. A few sources affirm that Chandragupta Maurya may have masterminded the death of two of the Macedonian satraps: Philip, child of Machatas, and Nicanor of Parthia. Provided that this is true, it was a bright demonstration in any event, for Chandragupta-Philip was killed in 326â when the future leader of the Maurya Empire was as yet a mysterious adolescent. Clashes With Southern India and Persia In 305 BCE, Chandragupta chose to grow his domain into eastern Persia. At that point, Persia was managed by Seleucus I Nicator, organizer of the Seleucid Empire, and a previous general under Alexander. Chandragupta held onto an enormous zone in eastern Persia. As a component of the harmony bargain that finished this war, Chandragupta oversaw that land just as the hand of one of Seleucus’s little girls in marriage. In return, Seleucus got 500 war elephants, which he set out to really utilize at the Battle of Ipsus in 301. With as much region as possible easily rule toward the north and west, Chandragupta Maurya next directed his concentration toward the south. With a multitude of 400,000 (as per Strabo) or 600,000 (as indicated by Pliny the Elder), Chandragupta vanquished the entirety of the Indian subcontinent aside from Kalinga (presently Odisha) on the east coast and the Tamil realm at the southern tip of the landmass. Before the finish of his rule, Chandragupta Maurya had bound together practically the entirety of the Indian subcontinent. His grandson Ashoka would proceed to add Kalinga and the Tamils to the realm. Family Life The just one of Chandragupta’s sovereigns or consorts for whom we have a name is Durdhara, the mother of his first child Bindusara. Notwithstanding, it is accepted that Chandragupta had a lot more consorts. As indicated by legend, Prime Minister Chanakya was worried that Chandragupta may be harmed by his foes, and thereforeâ started bringing modest quantities of toxic substance into the emperor’s food so as to develop a resilience. Chandragupta was unconscious of this arrangement and imparted a portion of his food to his better half Durdhara when she was pregnant with their first child. Durdhara kicked the bucket, yet Chanakya hurried in and played out a crisis activity to evacuate the full-term child. The baby Bindusara endure, however a touch of his mother’s harmed blood contacted his temple, leaving a blue bindu-the recognize that enlivened his name. Little is thought about Chandragupta’s different spouses and kids. Chandraguptas child Bindusara is likely recalled more as a result of his child than for his own rule. He was the dad of one of India’s most noteworthy rulers, Ashoka the Great. Demise At the point when he was in his 50s, Chandragupta got interested with Jainism, a very plain conviction framework. His master was the Jain holy person Bhadrabahu. In 298 BCE, the head disavowed his standard, giving over capacity to his child Bindusara. He thenâ traveled south to a cavern at Shravanabelogola, presently in Karnataka. There, Chandragupta thought without eating or drinking for five weeks until he kicked the bucket of starvation in a training known as sallekhana or santhara. Inheritance The line that Chandragupta established would govern over India and the southern piece of Central Asia until 185 BCE. Chandraguptas grandson Ashoka would emulate his example in a few different ways overcoming an area as a youngster and afterward getting faithfully strict as he matured. Truth be told, Ashokas reign in India might be the most perfect articulation of Buddhism in any administration ever. Today, Chandragupta is recognized as the unifier of India, similar to Qin Shihuangdi in China, however far less murderous. In spite of a lack of records, Chandragupta’s biography has motivated books, motion pictures, for example, 1958s â€Å"Samrat Chandragupt,† and even a 2011 Hindi-language TV arrangement. Sources Goyal, S. R. Chandragupta Maurya. Kusumanjali Prakashan, 1987.Singh, Vasundhra. Maurya Empire. Rudra Publishers Distributors, 2017.

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

20 Must-Read Books about Disease and Being Sick

20 Must-Read Books about Disease and Being Sick Ive always been fascinated by diseases and the history of medicine, maybe because I read a lot of classic childrens literature where characters were always catching scarlet fever (or worse). For whatever reason, this fascination has lasted well into adulthood. Any time a new cultural history of a particular disease comes out, or a book about pandemics, I am in. And there are tons of interesting nonfiction books about disease and being sick! Here are 20 of them to get you started learning more about the human body and the history of medicine. Memoirs about Illness Illness as Metaphor by Susan Sontag Sontag writes about how cultural narratives and metaphors involving disease often cast blame on people who are sick. Think, for example, of how often we talk about people who die from cancer having lost a battle. Disease isnt a punishment or a curse, either, or a sign of some inner purity, as you might think if you read only Victorian novels. As Sontag writes, Everyone who is born holds dual citizenship, in the kingdom of the well and in the kingdom of the sick. Although we all prefer to use only the good passport, sooner or later each of us is obliged, at least for a spell, to identify ourselves as citizens of that other place. Sontag writes about cancer and tuberculosis, and in a follow-up to the original book, takes on the topic of AIDS. The two volumes have since been published as one. I read this book in grad school and it changed the way I think about the language of illness. Its a slim book and wont take long to read, and I think its one of the essential books about disease to read. The Cancer Journals  by Audre Lorde Like Sontag, Lorde writes about cancer from her own personal experience. This collection of essays and diary entries investigates the intersection of feminism and breast cancer. Lorde writes about her mastectomy, the cultural pressure women face to look as normal as possible, and how her reaction to her diagnosis is shaped by her identity as a black lesbian feminist poet. Sick by Porochista Khakpour   In this memoir, Khakpour shares her experience of being diagnosed with late-stage Lyme, a diagnosis that finally explained many years of unexplained illness but upended her life. Traveling from New York to California to New Mexico and even further afield in search of the best doctors and treatments, Khakpour contends with hospitalizations, drug addiction, and mounting medical bills in this candid look at what its like to live with a chronic illness. Khakpours book is an essential look at a disease thats been in the headlines. When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi   Neurosurgeon Kalanithi was only 36 when he was diagnosed with Stage IV lung cancer. Facing a terminal diagnosis, he sets out to answer the question of what makes life worth living. In this profoundly moving memoir, he wrestles with questions about having children, how to plan for a future he wont see, and how to go on after the worst. The Collected Schizophrenias by Esme Weijun Wang   In this essay collection, Wang combines personal experience and research to investigate mental illness. Schizophrenia is not a single diagnosis, and its also long been misunderstood by the public and even the medical community. Wang dispels misconceptions as she writes about how schizoaffective disorder has manifested in her own life. Tell Me Everything You Don’t Remember by Christine Hyung-Oak Lee   At the age of 33, Lee had a stroke that turned her world upside down. Struggling to hold memories in her mind, she began to write notes in her journal, later using those notes to create this memoir of the stroke and how it changed her life. What is the connection between memory and self, and how does the way we see ourselves change when our memories are altered? Books About Specific Diseases Rabid by Bill Wasik and Monica Murphy Rabies is probably my number one disease obsession (anyone who knows me is rolling their eyes right now) and this is one of my favorite books about disease ever. Its just that fascinating. Did you know that rabid bats can bite humans without even leaving a mark? Or that one unusual symptom of rabies is, um, spontaneous ejaculation? Youll learn those fun facts and more in this spirited, entertaining cultural history of one of the deadliest diseases known to humans. (The fatality rate of rabies is 100%! Except for a few medical miracles.) The Great Mortality by John Kelly We all know that the Black Plague changed the worldâ€"its hard to argue otherwise when it killed 25 million people in the 14th century, devastating the population of Europe and Asia. This is a straightforward, compulsively readable account of how the plague spread. Kelly crafts a dramatic narrative about the prejudice, misery, sacrifice and more that changed the world forever. Black Death at the Golden Gate by David K. Randall   Most people think of the plague as something medieval, especially since the invention of penicillin. But Randall is here to let us know that the plague is closer than we think. In 1900, a Chinese immigrant named Wong Chut King died a quiet death in San Francisco. A city health officer noticed something unusual, though: a swollen black lymph node that indicated bubonic plague. What followed was a race against time to contain a deadly disease in a fast-growing city, even as officials refused to believe that the plague had returned. Pale Rider by Laura Spinney Believe it or not, historians estimate that more people died in the 1918â€"1920 outbreak of the Spanish Flu than died in World War One. Its one of the most deadly outbreaks in human history but is always overshadowed by the war that came before. Spinney investigates how this pandemic began and how it tested human and medical ingenuity. Was the Spanish Flu as significant in shaping the 20th century as two world wars? Spinney argues yes, and its a truly absorbing read. The Ghost Map by Steven Johnson This is another one of my favorite books about disease. Looking for the story of a cholera outbreak in Victorian London told with the relentless investigative feel of a police procedural? This is it! In 1854, a cholera outbreak devastates London. Not only is there no cure, no one is totally sure how it spreads. Physicians and members of the medical establishment point to the miasma theory, the idea that diseases are spread by bad air from the stinking River Thames, but Dr. John Snow has another theory. He sets out to prove how cholera is spread by tracing the path of the outbreak through a London neighborhood.   Catching Breath by Kathryn Lougheed Tuberculosis has been immortalized in art, film and literature from  La Boheme  to Moulin Rouge. As a disease, its often been romanticized thanks to these portrayalsâ€"but as Lougheed points out, it still kills over a million people a year. And now particularly nasty strains of antibiotic-resistant tuberculosis are cropping up around the world. What is it about tuberculosis that so fascinates us? In this compelling history of the disease, we learn about tuberculosiss beginnings 40,000 years ago and how it has cleverly adapted to continue infecting humans, as well as cutting-edge new treatments. The Emperor of All Maladies by Siddhartha Mukherjee You dont need me to tell you that cancer is awful. In this sprawling, readable book, Mukherjee gives us a biography of this scourge with so many different deadly forms. Cancer has been around for thousands of years, as youll learn. Treatments have changed so much over time (and are, of course, still changing today) as we try to keep up with this deadly disease. Typhoid Mary: An Urban Historical by Anthony Bourdain   I, too, thought it was a little strange that Anthony Bourdain wrote a book about Mary Mallon, who was a cook known for unwittingly affecting the families she worked for with typhoid fever. But I guess its the cooking connection. Regardless, this is a slim, breezy read that tells Marys rather sad story with all of Bourdains trademark charm and verve. Polio: An American Story by David M. Oshinsky   I feel like polio could be a season of American Horror Story, to be honest. Its hard to imagine now, but the idea of polio once terrorized the world. The disease often struck children and permanently damaged their nerve cells. Oshinsky describes the race to find a cure for polio, which was the source of an intense rivalry between Jonas Salk and Albert Sabin. And as Oshinsky reveals, polio may not have been the all-encompassing threat people imaginedâ€"but it nevertheless became a specter hanging over daily life in post-war North America. General Books about Disease and Medicine Get Well Soon by Jennifer Wright If youre looking for a general book about several of the worst plagues in human history, this is the perfect read for you. With tons of humor and an evident fascination with her subject matter, Wright looks at a few of the most notorious plagues humans have suffered, from tuberculosis to AIDS. The book is a well-researched overview of these diseases rather than a deep dive, but its a good book to dip in and out of. Being Mortal by Atul Gawande   This isnt quite a book about disease, but its nevertheless a fascinating look at medicine and the changes that medical advances bring to our lives. Modern medicine has made it possible for people to live longer than ever before. But along with increased lifespans come nursing homes and treatments that prolong rather than end suffering. Gawande, a surgeon, examines the limitations of medicine as the end of life approaches. The Pandemic Century by Mark Honigsbaum   Just over 100 years ago, the Spanish Flu devastated the world. But what no one could predict was that outbreak was just the beginning of a century of unanticipated public health disasters. Honigsbaum writes about the past 100 years in pandemics, covering well-known and forgotten outbreaks. Along the way, we learn about the limits of medicine and about how diseases can exacerbate existing racial and religious tensions. The Next Pandemic by Ali S. Khan If youre like me, you spend a lot of time wondering what new pandemics life has in store for us. (Im very fun at parties.) Khan, a public health first responder, recounts disasters hes witnessed, including outbreaks of anthrax and bird flu, and how the effectiveness of the human response is often what decides how deadly an outbreak will be. On Immunity by Eula Biss   Many diseases are making comebacks these days because parents arent vaccinating their children. When Biss became a parent, she was surprised at her own fear of vaccinating her child. (She did vaccinate, and this is a pro-vaccination book, just to be clear.) She writes eloquently about the idea of immunity, considering questions like what it means to inject a bit of a disease into your body in the name of protecting yourself from it, and if were ever truly protected. Is immunity an individual choice or a societal one? And what is behind the anti-vaxx movement? If youre looking for more books about disease, you may want to check out a couple of other Book Riot lists: 5 Fiction and Nonfiction Books About Medicine;  50 Books to Read if You Love Medicine; 100 Must-Read Books About the History of Medicine. Happy reading, and stay vaccinated!  

Thursday, May 21, 2020

A Brief Note On Vehicular Networks And The Future Of The...

In the paper â€Å"Vehicular networks and the future of the mobile internet† by Mario Gerla and Leonard Kleinrock, the authors identify the urban Internet infrastructure role that a network of vehicle grids can support with applications that range from email and voice over IP to emergency operations in case of natural disaster, terrorist attacks or other events that can disrupt the operation of wired networks. The vehicle grid components (radios, access points, spectrum, standards and others) constitute the concept of VANET (Vehicle Adhoc Network) and they are going to be use in the build of car-to-car applications. There are a lot of emerging applications that are taking advantage of the VANET. The focus of this paper is to review the role of the Internet Infrastructure in supporting vehicular applications. The main different between the VANET and MANET (Mobile Ad hoc Networks) is that in VANET the wired Internet Infrastructure is accessible and omnipresent via Wi-Fi, DSRC, WiMAX, 3G, LTE. A usual practice of considering the wireless network an extensions attached by a edge gateways is becoming non economical and instead the use of mesh networks, overlays and virtualization is been considered as a viable option to connect the services on the internet backbone. The paper examines the emerging application that can be provided and the vehicle oriented internet services. These have been the first steps towards mobile vehicle architecture. Most of the investigation already performedShow MoreRelatedBusiness in Singapore30736 Words   |  123 PagesGlobalisation Stages and Risk Issues - Singapore Insurance Market INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY - Copyright - Trademarks - Patents - Industrial Designs - Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights SINGAPORE INFO-COMM TECHNOLOGY LANDSCAPE - Fibre Broadband - Fixed-Mobile Convergence - Cloud Computing 15 52 21 59 63 27 66 30 33 39 2 DOING BUSINESS IN SINGAPORE FOREWORD Singapore as your Anchor in Asia For many years, our Guide to Doing Business in Singapore has been wellRead MoreProject Mgmt296381 Words   |  1186 Pagesreserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written consent of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., including, but not limited to, in any network or other electronic storage or transmission, or broadcast for distance learning. Some ancillaries, including electronic and print components, may not be available to customers outside the United States. This book is printed on acid-free paper. 1 2

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Should Renewable Energy Be A Higher Concern Four Or...

The energy in our country is suffering, we have been powering with inefficient sources for years now and the harm that it is doing to the country has started to become apparent. Renewables are the only way to stop, or at the very least set back the inevitable downfall of our ecosystem. I think that the next big breakthrough for renewable energy is implementing off-grid communities that use renewable sources as their main sources of power, so that we can potentially escape the energy rut that we got ourselves stuck in. America is wasting their finite resource, such as coal and nuclear when we could actually be using renewable sources. Most of our countries citizens either have never thought about where their energy comes or they do not†¦show more content†¦In 2012, NREL found that together, renewable energy sources have the technical potential to supply 482,247 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity annually. This amount is 118 times the amount of electricity the nation currently consumes. However, it is important to note that not all of this technical potential can be tapped due to conflicting land use needs, the higher short-term costs of those resources, constraints on ramping up their use such as limits on transmission capacity, barriers to public acceptance, and other hurdles.† (*Add citation) (*Unfinished paragraph). It is a widely accepted fact that renewable energy would be highly beneficial to our country and the general well being of those living in our country. Instilling this new way of energy usage into our communities will inevitably increase the state of living for those in cities and other well populated areas. The change to renewable energy sources could drastically lower the pollutants currently being dispersed into the atmosphere by coal mines and other harmful power options, increasing the supply of renewable energy would allow us to replace carbon-intensive energy sources and significantly reduce U.S. global warming emissions†¦ a 25 percent by 2025 national renewable electricity standard would lower power plant CO2 emissions 277 million metric tons annually by 2025—the

Developmental Growths Of Oled Technology Engineering Essay Free Essays

string(48) " reported up to now was obtained by Ikai et Al\." The importance of electronic shows has late increased due to the advanced developments of LED or light breathing rectifying tube engineering. These developments have brought LED engineering to its following degree by affecting a series of organic thin movies between two music directors, which are known as Organic light-emitting diode or ( organic visible radiation breathing rectifying tube ) . OLEDs can be used to do high efficiency shows and dynamic lighting. We will write a custom essay sample on Developmental Growths Of Oled Technology Engineering Essay or any similar topic only for you Order Now Due to the visible radiation emitted from the OLEDs, they do non necessitate a backlight and so are thinner and more efficient than LCD shows which presently require a white backlight. The chances of OLED engineering are great but non without its hurdlings. Presently, it costs more to bring forth OLEDs them modern LCD engineering. Similarly, their overall life clip is reasonably limited, these and other issues urgently need to be addressed to properly implement them in the consumer market. Introduction In the mid-20th century research workers at the Universit A ; eacute ; de Nancy in France foremost produced electroluminescence with organic stuffs. These research workers developed setup that would direct excitement of the dye molecules or excitement of negatrons [ Bernius, M ] . These electroluminescent cells were developed utilizing acridine orange and mepacrine with a high electromotive force of jumping current. After their success many stuffs were studied and experimented in assorted establishments to detect a stuff that would supply a high quality visible radiation end product. It was discovered that certain plastics could be altered into conductive stuffs. This find helped the apprehension of conductive stuffs and their belongingss. These finds revolutionized the attack to digital engineering by showing a cheaper and more flexible option to expensive semiconducting materials of the clip. In 1985 the Eastman Kodak Company developed a bilayer device based on vapour deposited molecular movies that used a hole conveyance bed with a bed electroluminescence. This find was done by accident while they were experimenting with solar cells and noticed a glowing stuff that was subsequently patented and was the start of OLED engineering [ Tang, C. W. ] . This new rectifying tube showed the potency of a device that would hold improved efficiency with less power to run. Modern OLED devices are able to breathe visible radiation on their ain, unlike LCD devices that are dependent on backlight beginning to make light. Light is emitted from the smaller OLED pels with aid of a really thin organic movie bed. This bed of organic stuff is placed between two music directors, which are besides between a glass top home base and a glass underside home base kwon as the substrate. When an electric Current is applied to the two music directors, a bright, electro luminescent visible radiation is produced from the organic stuff. OLED engineering is really dynamic when it comes to light that can breathe from really little luminescent to a really high degree measured in little increases. With the add-on of colour movies, OLEDs can use the basic colour specifying pigments ruddy, green and bluish to make any coveted colour or shadiness including white [ So, Franky ] . Unfortunately, these rectifying tubes are still expensive to bring forth. Newly developing engineerings such as intercrossed light-emitting bed that consists of non-conductive polymers doped with light-emitting conductive polymers offer both mechanical and production advantages that could assist work out the disbursal of these rectifying tubes [ So, Franky ] . More research is required to develop a higher quality production of OLEDs, fortuitously with the degree of advancement already achieved with OLEDs ; it will merely be a affair of clip. Body At this clip OLED engineering is the taking following coevals engineering for level panel shows. OLED devices will dwell of full colour visible radiation breathing engineering, which provide high brightness, low power ingestion and great contrast. Furthermore, they are compact, lightweight, can defy important mechanical tonss have have a broad scope of operating temperatures [ Wen, S.-W. , M.-T ] . The possible for these show devices is rather big. Their application from cell phones, auto wireless to the helmet mounted index shows on the windscreen of vehicles and illuming can greatly better assorted developing engineerings. The development of phosphorescent stuffs like OLED, can be non merely use to expose devices, but besides as a thin movie light beginning that may replace legion incandescent big and expensive non organic LED beginnings. OLEDs produce light by the recombination of negatrons and holes. When a electromotive force is applied across the device, negatrons are injected from cathode and holes are injected from anode. Transport and radiative recombination of electron-hole braces is at the emissive polymer beds [ M A ; uuml ; llen, K. , ] . As the negatrons bead into the holes, they release energy in the signifier of visible radiation. The colour of the visible radiation emitted depends on the composing of the organic emissive bed. Multiple beds can be combined in one device to bring forth any colour including white. Material efficiencies The chief demands for OLED stuffs are high luminescence in the solid province, good bearer mobility, good thermal and oxidative stableness and good colour pureness [ Wen, S.-W. , M.-T ] . The i ¬?rst coevals of efi ¬?cient OLEDS developed from Eastman Kodak was based on i ¬Ã¢â‚¬Å¡uorescent stuffs. In this instance, the emanation of visible radiation is the consequence of the recombination of vest excitons or nomadic concentration of energy in a crystal. However, the internal efi ¬?ciency is limited to 25 % [ M A ; uuml ; llen, K. , ] . The 2nd coevals uses phosphorescent stuffs where all excitons emit through an efi ¬?ciently four times more than i ¬Ã¢â‚¬Å¡uorescent stuffs. The presence of heavy atoms such as Ir or Pt additions spin-orbit yoke, favours intersystem traversing and allows radiative three passages. Baldo et Al. 30 were the i ¬?rst to describe the usage of green phosphorescent dye to increase the device efi ¬?ciency. Highly efi ¬?cient viridity and ruddy electro phosphorescent emitters have been demonstrated with internal quantum efi ¬?ciencies nearing 100 % . 31,32 The highest aglow efi ¬?ciency of 70 lumen W?1 reported up to now was obtained by Ikai et Al. You read "Developmental Growths Of Oled Technology Engineering Essay" in category "Essay examples" 33 utilizing tris ( 2-phenylpyridine ) Ir ( III ) ( Ir ( ppy ) 3 ) phosphorescent dye in an improved device construction. Phosphorescent stuffs have besides been used in polymer engineering ( wet procedure ) . 34 The stuffs used for OLEDs are formless or semi-crystalline i ¬?lms. For SM-OLED, typical p-type stuffs are derived functions of triarylamines, and n-type stuffs consist of derived functions of metal chelates such as tris ( 8-hydroxyquinolato ) aluminum ( III ) ( Alq3 ) , triazoles or oxadiazoles. The efi ¬?ciency is improved by doping the breathing bed with assorted organic dyes as shown in Table 1. By and large the doping rate is about 1-2 wt % and this solution has been widely used to tune the coloring material and to better the device life-time. It has been demonstrated that by doping the host Alq3 with assorted guest molecules such as coumarin 540 ( C540 ) , 2,4-bis ( dicyanomethylene ) – 6- ( p-dimethylaminostyryl ) -4H-pyran ( DCM1 ) or [ 2-methyl-6- [ 2- ( 2,3,6,7-tetrahydro-1H,5H-benzo [ ij ] quinolizin-9-yl ) ethenyl ] -4H-pyran-4-ylidene ] propanedinitrile ( DCM2 ) , the electroluminescence efi ¬?-ciency can be improved by a factor of two at least. 7 Furthermore, by utilizing these dopants, a broad scope of colorss from greenish-blue to orangish-red can be obtained. Stability Device stableness is an of import issue for an emissive engineering such as OLEDs, and peculiarly differential ripening of the three primary colourss. Despite the absence of any standardised measuring method, the device life-time is normally dei ¬?ned as the average clip to half-brightness. It is by and large assumed that for show applications, except likely for portable electronics, a life-time of over 20 000 H with a sensible brightness degree of at least 100 cadmium m?2 is necessary. However, as discussed subsequently in this paper, to accomplish such a degree of show brightness, the luminosity of each pel needs to be much higher, and it has been widely shown that the life-time of OLEDs beads dramatically for high luminosity values. Degradation phenomena occur both under operating conditions and while the device is in storage, and consequence in a lessening in device luminosity and an addition of the on the job electromotive force over clip for a changeless current denseness val ue. Three distinguishable debasement mechanisms have been identii ¬?ed in small-molecule-based OLEDs: 46 dark-spot debasement, ruinous failure and intrinsic debasement. While the i ¬?rst two debasement manners can be moderately solved by agencies of equal control over the device fiction conditions ( clean room, glove-box, encapsulation ) , the intrinsic debasement mechanism is more ambitious and still remains an issue for OLED engineering and peculiarly for the bluish colour. Signii ¬?cant activity is taking topographic point in order to better device life-time by utilizing new stuffs that are immune to oxidization and by developing efi ¬?cient encapsulation procedures. High glass passage temperature ( Tg ) stuffs are desired in order to acquire stable devices under operation. Lifetimes now reported in the literature for the most advanced i ¬?rst coevals RGB stuffs ( i ¬Ã¢â‚¬Å¡uorescent SM stuffs and polymers ) are good over 20 000 H at room temperature and at least for luminosity up to 100 cadmium m?2. Nevertheless, the bluish life-time remains weaker ( peculiarly for polymer stuffs ) which could do a ruddy displacement of the show due to differential ripening of RGB colourss. Typical life-time values are shown in Table 2 for the 2nd coevals of stuffs. 47 Efi ¬?cient and stable bluish phosphorescent stuffs are non yet available and remain a challenge for the chemist. One has to maintain in head that the life-time drops dramatically with increasing temperature, and most of the paradigms developed so far have a life-time of 6000-8000 H at room temperature, which is non high plenty for more demanding applications such as telecasting or computing machine shows. In contrast to other show engineerings, OLED shows can be fabricated on i ¬Ã¢â‚¬Å¡exible substrates but so far such i ¬Ã¢â‚¬Å¡exible devices have non reached the market owing chiefly to their limited life-time. Effective encapsulation ( both on the underside and top side of the device ) o f i ¬Ã¢â‚¬Å¡exible OLED shows is still an industrial challenge. A reappraisal of thin-i ¬?lm pervasion barrier engineering for i ¬Ã¢â‚¬Å¡exible OLEDs has been published late. 48 Future Tendencies OLED engineering is the following large thing. It is a new engineering used to make thin, efficient and bright shows and illuming panels. OLED shows have many advantages over LCDs every bit good more colourss, increased brightness and contrast ratio, faster response clip for full gesture picture and less power ingestion. OLEDs devices are highly efficient between 95 – 99 % of the input energy converted to visible radiation. Since the beds that make up the OLED are really thin, photons are non trapped within the active part, as can be the instance with LCD devices. The contrast ratio is an country where OLED show trumps plasma show though, since it offers blacker inkinesss and brighter Whites. The contrast ratios for plasma shows are around the 5,000:1 grade whereas for OLED shows this figure runs up to 1,000,000:1 [ Merson, Gary ] . Both displays employ pels that are emissive in nature and make visible radiation instead than barricade the visible radiation from an external beg inning. This blocking of light creates a great egress experience with broad position capablenesss. One possible hereafter vision for OLED engineering is the usage on transparent Windowss. These devices would work like a regular window by twenty-four hours. At dark it could be switched on and go a light beginning or an internal pilotage system. This could be possible because OLED allows transparent shows and light beginnings. The current province of OLED engineering is really exciting since the many old ages of its development is eventually demoing really originative results. Thin movie shows and luminescent lighting applications have greatly progressed with OLED structured developing engineerings. The chances of OLED engineering are great but non without its hurdlings. Decision OLED is an emerging new engineering for thin panel shows and luminescents. It can be used for mp3 participants, cell phones, digital cameras or handheld gambling devices. The field of applications for OLED shows is wide. Compared to LCD and plasma OLED is a better engineering in all facets. OLED show features develop perfect black, sing angles, highly fast response clip, true colour deepness, highly slender frame with low power ingestion. The lone downside of the OLED engineering is the monetary value and its life-time. Currently, OLED shows are merely come ining the market so their production costs and monetary values are really high. Plasma and LCD shows have been around for many old ages, so they are much cheaper. This factor along with the long life of Plasma shows gives them the border in the current market, but OLED engineering is a developing engineering. As the engineering progresses the monetary values of these shows will diminish and their popularity will increase therefore they will slowly push plasma shows off the market. This engineering has great possible and has a really broad scope of applications. It has important cost advantage compared with the production engineering of liquid crystal matrices. These devices are much less rich in stuffs ; they require a significantly smaller figure of fabricating operations. Though OLED engineering is still being developed, assorted signifiers are already on the market such as Super AMOLED shows, in the close hereafter we will see more advanced presentations of this developing engineering and its benefits every bit shortly as the hurdlings are overcome. How to cite Developmental Growths Of Oled Technology Engineering Essay, Essay examples

Friday, April 24, 2020

Notre Dame De Paris Essays - Kingdom Hearts Characters, Operas

Notre Dame De Paris Everyday, the people of Paris are accustomed to waking to the bells of Notre Dame. Today, the 6th of January, was different though. It is to be a hectic and eventful for the ambassadors of Flanders would arrive to discuss the marriage of the price to Margaret of Flanders. Coincidentally that same day was the Epiphany and the well-renowned Festival of Fools. As the citizens of Paris awoke, they assembled in the great hall with different expectations. Many came to watch the crowning of the Pope of Fools; others are anxiously awaiting the start of a melodrama. Astoundingly, the great hall is filled beyond capacity when tensions break and the crowd orders that the promised play to begin at once. It is here where we meet an important plot developer, Gringoire the poet, who has drafted the play and as any good playwright would, is tremendously happy about his masterpiece. However, to his arrant horror everyone present in the great mass of Parisians losses interest in his production when the ambassadors and other dignitaries arrive with the archbishop. Determined to have his piece performed, Gringoire pressures the four actors to continue. Unfortunately, his attempts are vain. Some time afterwards a crowd rallies together and begins the election of the Pope of Fools. The crowd becomes boisterous, even his own actors are drawn to the election. Soon Gringoire is left alone. His hopes and expectations vanquished, the story's playwright departs into the streets as the rest of the city parades its newfound Pope of Fools, the opprobrious, grotesque, Quasimodo. As people of all ages presented their hideous grimaces in hopes of being elected Pope, the notorious hunchback of Notre Dame Cathedral was spotted amongst the assemblage and crowned the most hideous creature on earth. Afterwards, Quasimodo is raised above the crowd and is ridiculed. However, he perceives the crowd is paying homage to his crown. Penniless, without shelter, food and nowhere to turn, Gringoire continues to gape the streets wondering where he will get his next meal and cursing the people of Paris and their Festival of Fools. As he roams, he finds an interesting distraction, that of La Esmeralda's show. The most beautiful of gypsies, this charming, slender young woman was perceived as a witch and sorceress because of her exotic show and well-trained goat. In actuality La Esmeralda was simply an extremely keen and generous person whose generosity and kindness left everyone she came in contact with entranced. Among the thunderstruck by her charms and resplendent beauty were the newly elected Pope, a distraught poet and a sinister and twisted priest. From atop the shoulders of the masses, Quasimodo has an excellent view of the glowing Esmeralda as she performs her dances. Her astounding beauty immediately attracts Quasimodo. He is awakened from his reverie only when his transport comes to a sudden stop at the orders of a stern and feeble priest. Suddenly the massive Pope lowers from his thrown and hurls his powerful body at the feet of the slender old priest. Astonished by the humility of their Pope, the crowd fails to realize that they have lost their entertainment for the night. Some time afterwards, we find Gringoire following La Esmeralda in hope that he might find some source of support. He is thwarted however when a tall, shadowy figure assaults the gypsy princess; and he is confronted by the powerful fists of Quasimodo. Like all damsels in distress, Esmeralda requires the help of a knight in shining armor, she finds her hero in the form of Captain Phoebus de Chateauprs. Meanwhile, Gringoire continues on his way meeting several beggars. He fails to recognize his location in a very dangerous part of Paris. He is attacked and kidnapped by the same beggars. He is taken to the dreaded Court of Miracles where the blind can see, and the lame run. There he is told that the only escape from death was that he joins them as a member of slang, or a woman can choose to marry him. He fails the tests miserly but is saved when La Esmeralda is touched with pity as the noose is placed around his neck. She offers to marry the poet pitifully. After captured by Phoebus and his archers, Quasimodo was arrested. Now, on the morrow of the festivities, he stood trial on charges of nocturnal disturbance, assault, disloyalty and resisting arrest. It was by no means a just trial. However, the judge and Quasimodo are both completely deaf. Evidently, this presents a major problem; Quasimodo

Tuesday, March 17, 2020

Angels Unaware Essay Example

Angels Unaware Essay Example Angels Unaware Essay Angels Unaware Essay The beginning of March is still a bit windy not yet hot. Spring has not even hit yet so t he winters crisp air still blew well during the night. Well this particular night the wind was still but it was still cold. I was driving by myself for the first time with my mothers truck. It was pitch black. The only light was the street lights, the lights from porches that people left on, and of course my head lights . While being ribbon blind at night time I can only ride with my lights on bright. I was halfway ho me from Garlanded, Just a ten to fifteen minute drive, when I run across a man walking. Walking along Roberta Drive, a two lane road that almost everyone in Forestall, Gar dandle, Pratt, or Aggressively had traveled. Suburban area, quiet neighborhood with busy lanes. Every street that runs off of this main road had its own bus stop. No lights only stop signs. Small hills a ND lots of steep curves. Roberta Drive was busy during the early morning rush hour trying to get to w ark, busy during lunch break, and the rush hour trying to get home from work. No one walked along the is road. There was no sidewalks or even a soft shoulder. If a car was to happen to run off the road it would literally be in someone front yard. Meaning chances are if a person was to be walking and a car happens to slightly run off the road that same person would probably not make it. Homeless? Where could he be going? Should I do it? Honestly I had only owned my lice ensue for Hall 2 a week. I was driving my moms car without permission plus I could not see in the dark k. Not to mention could be another Ted Bundy and Just kill me off right then and no one would ever know w. I wanted to help him but I was so nervous because the last encounter Id had with a homeless. O en homeless that truly didnt want to be helped. Only being eleven years old I still remember that ordinary day of shopping for com on needs for our home. My mother and I went to Wall

Sunday, March 1, 2020

Low-Cost Gift Ideas for College Students

Low-Cost Gift Ideas for College Students If youre like most college students, buying gifts present a complicated dilemma: Youd like to give nice presents but you are, after all, a college student trying to live on a budget. So how can you balance wanting to give nice presents with the limits of your bank account? Luckily, there are ways to give low-cost gifts without coming across as cheap. 8 Low-Cost Gift Ideas for College Students Print out and frame a nice picture. With everything being digital these days, try to remember the last time someone gave you a printed-out picture that you can hang on your wall and how nice that present was (or would be!). If youre really short on cash, print something at the highest quality available on your printer and make a nice frame to match. Give a simple college-themed gift. While the $60 sweatshirts in the campus bookstore are pretty nice, they might also be out of your budget. See what else you can find that celebrates your time in school while costing a little less. Keychains, bumper stickers, t-shirts on the clearance rack (will your cousin really know?), plastic cups, and lots of other presents can be had for under $10 and even under $5, if you really spend some time looking. Give the gift of time. Money may be in tight supply for you, but time may not be especially if you need a gift for the holidays when youre home on break. Consider planning a nice walk with your mom, ​volunteering with your dad, hanging out with your friend at his work one afternoon, or even babysitting for your parents so they can get some time to themselves. Make something from scratch. Nearly everyone has some kind of creative talent. Think about what you do best and run with it. Can you write a few poems? Paint a picture? Mold something out of clay? Take some awesome photographs? Make something from wood? Write a song? Record yourself singing your mothers favorite tunes? Dont sell yourself short as a great source of gifts you can make completely on your own. Put together a piece of your life at college. It doesnt have to be fancy to be effective. If, say, your grandmother never had the chance to go to college, put together a shadow box or collage of images from your time in school. You can collect things like stickers, fall leaves, a page from the course catalog, or articles from the school paper to give her a piece of what your college life is like. Make a memory box for an old friend or family member. You can probably find a nice little box somewhere on campus or at a local big box or drug store. Cut up some nice pieces of paper and write a cherished memory of you and the person youre giving your gift to; fold them over once or twice; Then write a nice card that explains the gift and says how often they can unwrap one of the little memories in the box (once a week? once a month?) It can be a great trip down memory lane for you and a very personal, meaningful gift for an old friend or beloved family member. Frame a design you make. Who says only a photograph can go in a picture frame? Start with a piece of paper and get creative. Print or cut out quotes about the importance of education, snip headlines from your school paper, take (or sketch) a picture of your school as long as you put together something with a similar theme (e.g., your campus), its hard to make a homemade gift like this look bad. Let your creativity flow without worrying about the cost. Switch up a usual gift into something different. Dinner and a movie is a pretty classic gift for a girlfriend, boyfriend, or even a parents birthday. But if your money is tight, you can switch things up to have an equally good time without the high cost. Consider, for example, going to breakfast and a movie. The food bill will be cheaper, your movie will likely be a matinee (and cheaper than an evening film), and you and the person you take will have a unique experience, too.

Friday, February 14, 2020

Holistic Nursing Research Paper Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 1500 words

Holistic Nursing - Research Paper Example The term complementary is preferred because it conveys the idea that these therapies are used together with, rather than as a replacement for biomedical treatment. On the other hand, the term alternative conveys the thought of a therapy being used in place of a biomedical treatment. Finding a good definition for complementary therapies has been an uphill task. Several definitions have been proposed. The complementary therapy is a broad area of medicine that is made up of health systems, practices and modalities plus their accompanying beliefs. In the definition, the term complementary medicine is used n place of complementary therapies. However, the word â€Å"medicine† can be changed to â€Å"therapies†. There are more than 1700 identified complementary therapies. Classifying these therapies is as daunting as coming up with their definition. This is because the therapies vary and they encompass indigenous cultural practices that are vastly unknown in the western world. Additional challenges come up because the mechanisms of action for many complementary therapies are not known (Lange & Zahourek & Mariano 2013). NCCAM has suggested the following groups for complementary therapy: biological based therapies, mind-body therapies, manipulative and body-based therapies and energy therapies. NCCAM has noted that a complementary therapy is no longer classified as a complementary therapy once it becomes an accepted treatment for specific conditions (NCCAM, 2005). The boundaries between complementary therapy and the dominant health care systems keep changing. As a result, what may be considered as complementary at a point in time can be recognized as part of the mainstream healthcare later on . Complementary and alternative therapies are healthcare topics that have instigated discussion and debate in a large way. Many people in the US have shown considerable interest in these topics. This is evident

Saturday, February 1, 2020

Employment law 2 Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 750 words

Employment law 2 - Essay Example In this regard, it was not necessary for Leslie Accounting Firm to ask Gale these questions. Question 2 Jill can not use this situation as a defense to a Title VII action. This can be analysed to mean that she used the excuse so that she could discriminate the Hispanic crew members. In fact, EEOC compliance requires that employers should not discriminate people for employment on the basis of their color, nationality, or race. Question 3 An affirmative action is a plan containing statistical information indicating the association of precise jobs between eligible people especially in metropolitan recruiting areas and actual number of employees employed (Goldman and Corrada 194). Conversely, quotas are never allowed except in situations where they are directed by the federal court as a result of continued discrimination. In essence, goals are established in relation to when the fraction of underrepresented is less than what is expected and available in the recruitment area. However, the key element is that the availability depends on individuals having the required qualifications for the job, not just the percentage of minorities. Question 4 Title VII’s of the civil rights Act of 1964 prohibits against discrimination. This law protects mothers of young children from workplace discrimination (Goldman and Corrada 200). It is the responsibility of employers to prevent harassment directed to caregivers from occurring in the work place. Employees subjected to such harassment are required to follow the employer’s harassment complaint process. In case the employee report the matter to the employer and no action is taken against the supervisor, the employee can sue the employer for hostile work environment that violated Title VII. If the investigator determines that the employee was subjected to a hostile work environment, the court may rule that the employer was liable. Question 5 In the legal definition, sexual harassment is considered to be undesirable vo cal, bodily, or visual demeanor of a sexual nature that affects working conditions (Goldman and Corrada 200). Firstly, going by this definition, it is apparent that the employee in the current scenario can sue the employer for sexual harassment. However, the employees would be required by the court to prove the claim of sexual harassment. Therefore, she needs to prove she belongs to a protected class and that the harassment complained of was based on sex. In this case, the employee is a woman and is protected under antidiscrimination law. The act of her supervisor touching her back qualifies as a physical conduct of a sexual nature, and his making of â€Å"untoward† statement qualifies to be a verbal conduct of a sexual nature. Nevertheless, in determining the case, the court may look in to some issues. For example, as an employee, it is advisable to report such cases to employer in the company under published sexual harassment policy and give them a chance to solve the probl em (Goldman and Corrada 201). In this case, if the worker does not report to the employer first, she might loose the case. The law states that sexual harassment has to be severe or pervasive. In this regard, since the incidence occurred once, can not be enough for a law suit. Question 6 National origin

Friday, January 24, 2020

Alone and Unhappy :: Creative Writing Essays

Alone and Unhappy She sat on the Q train waiting for her stop. The time was finally here. She was just an hour away from happiness. Beverly Rd, Church St, Atlantic Ave she got up and off the train. She followed the rush of people to catch the 2 train into the city. The 2 or 3 train never came regularly so she waited patiently. In the distance she heard a couple of Mexicans playing the accordion and the guitar. She could not make out the song, but they sounded pretty good. Finally the 2 train pulled in and she boarded. She observed her surroundings to pass the time. It wasn’t a short trip from Brooklyn to the city. There was a Hispanic mother and her little son sitting across from her. The son stared at her the whole ride. She wondered if he could see right through her. His eyes were blank and still. She courteously smiled at the boy and he gave her the finger and laughed to himself. She gave the boy the finger and moved on to the next person that caught her attention. It was an older white man. He gave her a disapproving look and turned his head. She felt embarrassed now for her actions, but the boy started it. The train stopped and she thought it was her stop. She rushed to get up and noticed it was only 14th St. If she was pale, she would be beet red at this point. She gracefully sat back down and tried to fan herself to get rid of the flushed feeling in her cheeks. When she finally gained her composure, she noticed a man was standing in front of her against the doors. He just took her breath away. How gorgeous he was just standing there. She could not keep her eyes off him. He noticed and looked a little uncomfortable.

Thursday, January 16, 2020

Analysis of Jon Edwards : Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”

Anna Potts Steve Stewart ENGL 2130 06 February 2013 Analysis of Jonathan Edwards’ â€Å"Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God† The Great Awakening was a religious movement that spread throughout New England during the mid-eighteenth century, from about 1730 to 1745. The Great Awakening sought to make Christianity a deeply personal experience and pulled away from traditional ceremony, encouraging personal commitment and emotional involvement in faith. Jonathan Edwards was a Puritan and theologian; one of the most famous preachers of the Great Awakening.Edwards’ most famous sermon was â€Å"Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God†, despite the fact that he had delivered the sermon to his own congregation, with little effect, he felt led to use it again when invited to preach at the neighboring town of Enfield, Massachusetts on July 8, 1741. During Edwards’ sermon he used vivid imagery of hell, the wrath of God, and the hope of salvation to reveal his pers pective on the reality that awaited those that did not follow Christ. During his sermon Jonathan Edwards used vivid imagery and descriptions to make his congregation see that hell was a real place.To make the congregation see just how close to hell they truly were Edwards stated, â€Å"That world of misery, that lake of burning brimstone is extended aboard under you (Cox). † He also wanted them to realize that the longer they went without Christ, the heavier they would become. â€Å"Your wickedness makes you as it were heavy as lead, and to tend downward with great weight and pressure toward hell (Westerfield). † The ground beneath them would give way under the weight of their wickedness and they would plunge into hell where the Devil would be ready for them. The Devil is waiting for them, hell is gaping, for them, the flames gather and flash about them and would fain lay hold on them, and swallow them up (Smolinski 11). † If the descriptions of hell and the Devi l weren’t enough, Edwards also used the power and wrath of a vengeful God to strike fear into the hearts of the unconverted in the crowd at Enfield. The sheer magnitude of God’s power is shown in the line â€Å"There is nothing that keeps wicked men, at any one moment, out of hell, but the mere pleasure of God (Gallagher). Edwards instilled fear into the congregation by threatening the vengeance of God, â€Å"He will crush you under his feet without mercy, he’ll crush out your blood, and make it fly, and it shall be sprinkled on his garments (Trapp). † As more and more people chose not to follow Christ, God becomes angry and his wrath continues to grow. The wrath of God is like great waters that are dammed for the present; they increase more and more, and rise higher and higher, till an outlet is given; and the longer the stream is stopped, the more rapid and mighty is its course once it is let loose (Baym et al. 99). Edwards sought to show the congregat ion their desperate need for God’s grace, impressing the crowd with what he perceived as the power of truth. Before ending his sermon, Edwards appeals to the unconverted in the congregation with the hope of salvation from a sovereign God. Edwards continues, â€Å"And now you have an extraordinary opportunity (Rogers 11). †Ã¢â‚¬ You are in a day where Christ has thrown the door of mercy wide open, and stands calling and crying with a loud voice to poor sinners (Rogers 11). â€Å"Let everyone of you who is still without Christ, and hanging over the pit of hell, whether they be old men and women, or middle aged, or young people, or little children, now listen to the loud calls of God’s word and providence (Copeland et al. 228). † Edwards’ final line was a call for the congregation to look back on the depths of damnation through which they had traveled-leaving the valley of hell and returning to the mountain heights of the Devine perspective, the heig hts from which the hope of salvation could be properly understood and embraced (Stuart 58).Stephen Williams, an eyewitness in Enfield, wrote in his diary â€Å"before the sermon was done there was a great moaning and crying went through ye whole house, ‘What shall I do to be saved,’ ’Oh, I am going to Hell,’ ’Oh, what shall I do for Christ,’ and so forth. So yet ye minister was obliged to desist, ye shrieks and cries were piercing and amazing (Farley). † Though his sermon caused many to fear him, Jonathan Edwards’ ultimate goal was to convert the sinners and nonbelievers in the congregation and lead them into salvation.Edwards hoped the imagery and message of his sermon would awaken his audience. His underlying point was that God had given humanity a chance to rectify their sins. Edwards ended his sermon with one final appeal, â€Å"Therefore let everyone that is out of Christ, now awake and fly from the wrath to come. † To modern readers â€Å"Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God† may appear to be the work of a sadistic, wide-eyed radical or a fear-monger, but the sermon is actually a reflection of the cruel and puritanical time in which Edwards lived and preached.Works Cited Baym et at. The Norton Anthology of American Literature, Volume 1, Beginnings to 1865. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. 2008. Copeland, Lewis, Lawrence Lamm, and Stephen McKenna. The World’s Greatest Speeches. Fourth Enlarged Edition. New York: Dover Publications, Inc. 1999. Cox, Brandon. â€Å"Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God. † 2009. Retrieved from www. brandonacox. com, February 01, 2013. Farley, William P. â€Å"Jonathan Edwards and the Great Awakening. † Enrichment Journal. Springfield: The General Council of the Assemblies of God. 013. Retrieved from http://enrichmentjournal. ag. org, February 10,2013. Gallagher, Edward. â€Å"Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God: Some Unfinished Bu siness. † Department of English, Lehigh University. Retrieved from www. lehigh. edu , January 31, 2013. Rogers, Henry. The Works of Jonathan Edwards, A. M. : With an Essay on His Genius and Writings, Volume 2. London: Ball, Arnold, and Co. 1840. Print. Smolinski, Reine. â€Å"Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God. A Sermon Preached at Enfield, July 8th, 1741. † (1741).Electronic Texts in American Studies. Paper. Stuart, Robert Lee. â€Å"Jonathan Edwards at Enfield: and Oh the Cheerfulness and Pleasantness†¦Ã¢â‚¬â„¢ American Literature, Vol. 48, No. 1. Durham: Duke University Press. 1976. Print. Trapp, Joonna. â€Å"Hell In a Hand Basket: The absence of Hell in American Literature. † Northwestern College. Philosophy Colloquium. 2005. Westerfield, David. â€Å"A Quote From a Very Famous Edwards Sermon. † Theology. 2006. Posted on Sunday, May 28, 2006. Retrieved from www. davidwesterfield. net on January 30,2013.

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

How The American Revolution Affected Women - 1155 Words

How the American Revolution Affected Women In order to fully understand the changes that women’s lifestyles underwent after the Revolution, one must first understand what the status of women was prior to the Revolution and what roles they played during and after the Revolution. Before the Revolution women were looked down upon as strictly domestic help. They were excluded from politics. They had to perform many dangerous tasks. A woman could not bring suit in court, sign a legally binding contract, or attain property or have income in her own name. Married women were not allowed to be doctors or lawyers and were not accepted into universities (Berkin 455). During the Revolution women whose husbands were fighting for freedom played a significant role in the Emancipation of women. On March 31, 1776 Abigail Adams wife of John Adams, wrote a letter to her husband who was in Philadelphia in the Continental Congress. The letter shows the dire circumstances women were steeped in. She reminded her husband to ‘Remember the Ladies’. â€Å"We will not hold ourselves bound by any Laws in which we have no voice, or Representation. Regard us then as Beings placed by providence under your protection and in imitation of the Supreme Being make use of that power only for our happiness† (Maclean 1). In 1779 Judith Sargent Murray penned a systematic expression of feminist position. Her essay, ON THE EQUALITY OF THE SEXES, challenged the common misconception that males were more intelligent thanShow MoreRelated The Radical Changes Resulting from the American Revolution Essay1156 Words   |  5 Pageslearning about the American Revolution. Although it contains the word â€Å"revolution† in its name, there are many who don’t consider the American Revolution a real revolution. 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