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Search results on "PASSIONATE TEACHER":

Term Paper # 49687 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
?The Passionate Teacher?, 2004.
Discusses the infusion of passion in the process and content of teaching, as set forth by Robert L. Fried in his book, "The Passionate Teacher".
1,000 words (approx. 4.0 pages), 1 source, APA, $ 35.95
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Abstract
With all the seemingly ?unrewarding? aspects of teaching, why do people still choose teaching as their profession? The paper shows how Robert L. Fried answers this question in his book, ?The Passionate Teacher,? where he identifies passion as the vital element that teachers must possess upon deciding that they want to choose teaching as their profession. The paper explains how, in the book, Fried explains the important guidelines that teachers must remember in order to ensure that their teaching is appropriate to the kind of students that they teach.

From the Paper
"Thus, passion answers the question presented earlier, that is, why do people choose to teach as their profession despite its financial and emotional disadvantages. Passion plays a vital role in motivating people who are ready to help the younger generation not only in the transmission of knowledge, but also in communicating and sharing knowledge between the teachers and students. Passion ensures an individual to do his/her work well, satisfying not only the self but other people, especially the students, as well."
Term Paper # 89747 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
'The Passionate Shepherd to his Love', 2006.
A discussion and analysis of "The Passionate Shepherd to his Love" by Christopher Marlowe.
1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 2 sources, $ 44.95
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Abstract
This paper examines Christopher Marlowe's poem, "The Passionate Shepherd to his Love" and looks at how Marlowe uses language to convey the concept that love is beautiful. The paper also examines how, intellectually, the author provides a rhythmic pattern to the rhyming lines that incorporates carefree and blissful images to enhance the concept that the love he feels will be beautiful and simplistic.
Term Paper # 42048 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Passionate Sage", 2002.
An understanding of president John Adams through a review of "The Passionate Sage" by Joseph Ellis.
900 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 1 source, $ 35.95
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Abstract
This paper will discuss the book "The Passionate Sage" by Joseph Ellis, and seek to review this persons' opinion of the great president John Adams. By making a critical review of the book, we can see the author's opinions about this famous Founding Father, and seek to understand how he interprets him. By analyzing the main themes of the book, a better perspective can be made about how and what he lived for.
Term Paper # 46872 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Reason and Passion, 2004.
An examination of David Hume's philosophy of reason and passion.
1,293 words (approx. 5.2 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 43.95
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Abstract
This paper looks at how British philosopher David Hume posited that reason cannot be the major determinant of moral action and how, instead, reason should only play a secondary role to another primary human faculty, passion. It argues the continuing relevance of Hume?s thesis that, despite the current level of scientific knowledge, passion remains the strongest determinant of ethical and moral action. The first part of this paper evaluates Hume's conception of reason as an ability to calculate and to discern causation. The next part of the paper then looks at Hume's definition and categories of conception. In the final section, the paper compares Hume?s writings on the secondary role of reason to Peter Singer?s principle of utility and shows how passion continues to be the prime motivator human action.

From the Paper
"Despite the supposed primacy of reason, however, most people disagree with controversial philosopher Peter Singer's view of "preference utilitarianism," an extreme ethical value system that seeks to replace individual instinctive interests with a ?reasoned? concept of the general good. Singer?s value system states that one's own interests and ideas matter only when seen in their consequence to everyone else's interests (Singer 15). According to Singer's preference utilitarian, the obligation of an American couple to feed and nurture their own baby is equal to their obligation to feed and nurture a refugee Kurdish child. After all, both children have an interest in eating and growing up. The fact that parents intuitively love their own child more than a child they have never met does not figure into Singer's equation."
Term Paper # 52788 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
?The Passion of the Christ?, 2004.
This paper contends that Mel Gibson?s film, ?The Passion of the Christ?, is essentially a passionless piece of filmmaking.
1,585 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 6 sources, APA, $ 51.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that some film critics point out some glaring historical and scriptural inaccuracies in ?The Passion of the Christ?; using Latin might have been an impressive and unusual screenwriting technique, but it lent only a false sense of historical accuracy to the film. The author points out that part of why ?The Passion of the Christ? is passionless is because Gibson does not endeavor to explain the teachings of Jesus or invoke any real sympathy for the man. The paper concludes that the film does deliver a poignantly visceral rendition of the Passion of Christ, even if it does not amount to filmmaking genius and reveals the mind of Mel more than the mind of God.

From the Paper
"The cinematography of "The Passion of Christ" is stunning, and along with the acting, offers the film some saving grace. For instance, at the end of the film, after Jesus has been crucified, Mary holds the body of her dead son with Mary Magdalene at her side in a modern amalgamation of Pieta representations in painting and sculpture. The shot is one of the film?s most memorable and expertly composed, as if it were a study for a Michelangelo painting. Moreover, after the crucifixion, some brilliant camera work depicts the event as it would be viewed from heaven, in a swirling mass of color. This scene precedes a supposedly cosmic-inspired earthquake that destroys the Jewish Temple. Whether or not the earthquake actually did occur is irrelevant because Gibson was going for meaning and effect."
Term Paper # 104399 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Film: "Passion of Christ", 2008.
Reviews Mel Gibson's film "Passion of Christ" (2004), which was developed around verses from 'Isaiah 53' in the "New Testament".
895 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 3 sources, APA, $ 31.95
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Abstract
The paper describes the way that the film, "Passion of Christ" starts with a painful prayer from Jesus Christ followed by his disciple Judas betraying him. The author believes that the tortures and beatings of Jesus Christ are shown so intensely that they disturb the viewer's emotions. The paper relates the film's slow, gloomy environment as Christ moves along the path to the Mount of Olives. The author thinks that the most outstanding feature of the film is the portrayal of the human nature of the Son of God, which is beautifully expressed throughout the different emotional incidents.

Table of Contents:
Abstract
About the Story
Characterization of People
Characterization of Time
Characterization of Town and Others

From the Paper
"The entire movie moves along a single streak of time expect for the events of Jesus' life and his preaching remembered now and then .The sky, the sun and the moon are used to denote transition of time. Jesus Christ is caught on a gloomy night when he offers prayers to God to free him from the evil. Satan appears and signifies the start of evil. Mother Mary also feels that night to be strange and signifying something evil."
Term Paper # 55516 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Mel Gibson's ?The Passion of the Christ?, 2004.
This paper discusses director Mel Gibson's movie, "The Passion of the Christ", concerned specifically and graphically with the details of the torture and death of Jesus.
890 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 31.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that the violent nature of ?The Passion of the Christ? has created a great deal of controversy, but the movie has largely been seen as an accurate portrayal. The author points out that, in terms of New Testament studies, the movie's reach is limited because it contains a relatively restricted look at Jesus' teachings and because the movie has been criticized as anti-Semitic. The paper contends that, perhaps, the movie's greatest impact has been on the culture at large because it has increased interest in Christ's resurrection, and religious groups have taken this opportunity to use the movie for outreach.

Table of Contents
Introduction
Impact on New Testament Studies
Impact on Culture at Large
Conclusion

From the Paper
"Gibson's movie has been criticized as being anti-Semitic in nature, an accusation that has an impact on New Testament studies as well as on larger culture. In the movie, Gibson decides to omit the line from John's gospel that shows Caiaphas' inner torment at sending Jesus to the cross. In omitting this line, it can be argued that Gibson's movie is anti-Semitic, as it clearly shows Pontius Pilate's inner conflict with his actions."
Term Paper # 52494 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Angie Estes?s Poem, ?The Uses of Passion?, 2004.
Critical review of Angie Este's poem about passion.
1,035 words (approx. 4.1 pages), 0 sources, MLA, $ 36.95
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Abstract
This paper looks at the theme of the poem, "The Uses of Passion", considers its intended audience, and critically reviews the poem for its banality and lack of poetic voice.

From the Paper
"Angie Estes? poem on ?The Uses of Passion? proposes to deal with the way in which passion affects the human experience. Each line or two describes the way in which passion will change one?s life, as in the third line which claims ?It tells you what to wear.? (Estes) The thesis of this poem appears to be that passion lends meaning to life, but this is presented in the most mundane fashion imaginable so that one is actually led to suspect that passion actually saps the mind of its independent creativity while creating an illusion of meaning and purpose."
Term Paper # 68416 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Gibson's "Passion of the Christ", 2006.
An analysis of Mel Gibson's controversial film, "Passion of the Christ".
4,366 words (approx. 17.5 pages), 5 sources, MLA, $ 115.95
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Abstract
This paper summarizes and analyzes Mel Gibson's movie "Passion of the Christ", explaining the film's theological, historical and artistic elements. The paper also explains that, while each of these elements are already controversial by themselves, in combination made the film even more prone to controversy.

From the Paper
"In the earlier category are moments like that in which Jesus falls and then speaks to his mother telling her that he will make "all things new." This quote is out of context, coming from considerably later in the Bible. The point is not that Jesus actually made all things new at this historical moment, but rather than Gibson wishes the audience to know that the purpose of this suffering is to bring about a state of newness and grace -- and not having time to make a film of the entire history of Christianity, he moves this vital point into the narrative, making it prophetic rather than active."
Term Paper # 55745 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Passion of the Christ", 2004.
A review of Mel Gibson?s film, ?The Passion of the Christ,? with a focus on the negative effects of the film.
864 words (approx. 3.5 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 30.95
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Abstract
This paper presents a study of the scholarly and cultural ramifications of Mel Gibson?s film, ?The Passion of the Christ?. The impact of the film on New Testament studies is considered. The paper discusses the general cultural ramifications of the film.

From the Paper
"Any film concerning Christ?s passion is a combination of the four Gospels according to Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Gibson?s film is no exception, yet there are some points of emphasis in this particular work that may impact New Testament studies significantly. The first of these is the emphasis on the Jewish nation as sinners, rejecters of Christ and directly guilty for the crucifixion. The second is the emphasis on the brutality of Christ?s death in preference to the other elements of the salvation message, such as God?s love and Christ?s resurrection."
Term Paper # 16511 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Theme of Passion in the ?Scarlet Letter?, 2002.
A discussion of Nathaniel Hawthorne?s novel focusing on the passion, love and suffering of the characters, specifically Hester Prynne and Minister Dimmesdale.
1,065 words (approx. 4.3 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 37.95
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Abstract
The paper gives a brief overview of the novel and explains that through the theme of passion the characters are made to reveal their true selves and their dual characters and reflects the kind of society these characters live in. The paper uses numerous quotes in order to prove its assertions.

From the Paper
"One of the most important actions by Dimmesdale in the novel was his occasional act of putting his hand upon his heart, as Hawthorne described in the passage. This act by Dimmesdale can be taken symbolic in two ways: the first symbolism that this act means is that Dimmesdale, unknown to the readers, also bear the mark of the scarlet letter, and his constant act of touching it with his hand shows his passion and guilt (all the time) regarding his adultery and cowardice in admitting the immorality that he had committed with Hester."
Term Paper # 95035 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Caryle Murphy's "Passion for Islam", 2007.
This paper reviews and analyzes Caryle Murphy's book "Passion for Islam--Shaping the Modern Middle East: The Egyptian Experience".
2,150 words (approx. 8.6 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 67.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that, although modern events have focused much Western attention on area hotbeds of Islamic militancy, such as Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, the fight for the spirit of Islam on the banks of the Nile in several ways represents more completely the region's ongoing, unsettled tensions among belief and reason. The author points out that Murphy explores the reasons for Islamic decline such as (1) the clash of a newly decadent, yet once great civilization, with the irresistible force of an industrial revolution it might once have led and (2) the lack of democracy without which no society can develop in concert with rapid and unpredictable cultural and technological change. The paper relates that, starting with the end of the socialist promise of the Nasser era through the violence that rocked Egypt in the nineties, Murphy carefully follows the development of Islamist insurgency through its various forms, differentiating the facets of Islam in Egypt that played into the development of radical Islamist behavior.

Table of Contents:
Introduction
Book Review
Brief Analysis

From the Paper
"Lawrence Wright of the "New Yorker" has suggested recently that Osama Bin Laden's Egyptian deputy Ayman al-Zawahari is the true guiding force behind al Qaeda. If that is right, then the antecedents of al Qaeda lie as much in Egypt as in Saudi Arabia, the birthplace of bin Laden. Murphy has produced a huge deal of valuable reporting that lays bare the roots of this reign of terror, chronicling how fringe violent Egyptian Islamist organizations fought the state and terrorized the populace. There are certainly echoes of al Qaeda here, especially in the manner in which Islamic Jihad justified attacks on and murders of foreign tourists and Christian Copts though pronouncing Crusaders and Jews to be the enemies of Islam."
Term Paper # 29665 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Passion and Reasoning, 2002.
Shows how these elements are presented in plays by Jean Baptiste Moliere and Jean Racine.
1,138 words (approx. 4.6 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 39.95
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Abstract
Both "Tartuffe" by Jean Baptiste Moliere and "Phaedra" by Jean Racine are plays about passion and the momentary defeat of reason. The paper explores these themes in both plays. It shows that "Tartuffe" is as much a tale of hypocrisy as of passion and a suspension of reason and that "Phaedra" is about a powerful and passionate queen who is mocked by the object of her passion, Hippolytus, her stepson. The paper also uses Saint Thomas of Aquina's "Summa Theologica" for his views on reason.

From the Paper
"Although Tartuffe appears to be an extreme case of irascibleness, his hypocrisy must be his perceived ?proper? strategy to survive. Reason is entirely absent in his life, which leads to the inference that his life experiences may have completely eliminated its inherent power in Tartuffe. But in Orgon, the loss of reason is temporary and condition by the presence of the light of truth and reason, which his wife Elmire brings back to him. Just as enormously erratic as Tartuffe is Phaedra, whose fear of age and perceived loss of attractiveness, lead her to crave for Hippolytus. She also suffers a blackout of reason. Looking closely, it is a resistance of death in aging that conditions this fear. And Hippolytus? youth, as well as his challenging improbability as a pursuit, makes him seem like the solution to Phaedra?s problems with mortality. She has yet to discover that physical life is not the only, or the better, kind of life there is. But she loses the chance and the time to discover the true answer and solution by destroying herself, finding no more reason to live."
Term Paper # 61015 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Jane Eyre's Struggle Between Conscience and Passion, 2005.
An examination of Jane's internal struggle in the final section of "Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Bronte.
890 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 0 sources, $ 31.95
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Abstract
The final portion of the novel "Jane Eyre" presents the protagonist with a number of choices where she is forced to weigh matters of conscience versus her passions. This paper considers the last few chapters and discusses whether conscience or passion wins. It also analyzes how her fight between conscience and passion contributes to the novel as a whole.

From the Paper
"Feeling her perception of Rochester's voice to have had some mystical provenance, Jane immediately returns to Thornfield, discovering only a burnt-out ruin where the beautiful manor once stood. Once she finds Rochester-who was injured in the fire which killed Bertha and now lives in a smaller house in the woods-he confirms the supernatural nature of what she heard just before rejecting St. James' proposal. Rochester proposes marriage to her, and she accepts. Now that Bertha is gone, there is no impediment to Jane's and Rochester's marriage. They are married in a quiet ceremony and live as equals. As was her decision to share her inheritance with her cousins, this decision is one where her passion and her conscience coincide."
Term Paper # 37600 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Passions of Victorian Women, 2002.
Explores courtship and love in "Jane Eyre" and "Pride and Prejudice".
1,150 words (approx. 4.6 pages), 5 sources, $ 44.95
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Abstract
This paper compares "Jane Eyre" and "Pride and Prejudice" as a way to explore the social customs of Victorian England. Specifically, these two novels express the conflicts of love and passion with the social rules for courtship and marriage. Both novels portray how social expectations of behavior contradict the personal emotions of relationships and how these produce great emotional struggles that must be reconciled. In an era where passion and marriage are not enabled in the social sphere of Victorian customs, love becomes a conflict.
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Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>