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Loss in the American West. Chanda Cooper Comp Since the very beginning of time
when mankind first banded together for hunting gathering ...
... loss of his health, the loss of only son, and the loss of his ... Mullin, Michael J.
Encyclopedia of the American West: Volume Three, sv ?Parkman, Francis.? p ...
... This loss of the American dream is shown by Fitzgerald ... for the ?little guy.?
?I lived at West Egg, the ... to make symbols is very important to American values ...
... introduce bias into her theory, and the loss of objectivity ... One of the major features
of West's method of presenting his Afro-American critical thought is ...
... The Old West is perhaps the second most written about subject in American History. ...
In reality of the Old West Native Americans, the loss of the bison ...
Submitted by slprice51 on October 10, 2005
Category: American History
Words: 647 | Pages: 3
Views: 126
Popularity Rank: 62,966
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)
Chanda Cooper
Comp
Since the very beginning of time when mankind first banded together for hunting gathering humans have searched for an
eden, shangrila, what we would consider an ideal society. Many societies have managed to flourish for many centruies, but
they have always had created tragic flaws that allowed their social structre to rot from the inside out, as well as everyday economic, and
social differences that led to their eventual downfall. I believe that this dream of Nirvana is unatainable no matter how hard a group of
people might strive for it, but by examing the structre of society from the bottom up I believe we will see that the finished product of a
ideal society might be unattainible but just but striving for that that common goal we can make time a better place as well as the
qualifications to be an expectations of an ideal society.
To truly understand what would be an ideal society we must start with the idea of a basic moral fibre, thus letting society have
an inate sense of right from wrong. This would mean that the human species has some sort of unspoken law, a type of behavior that we hold all ourselves accountable to. C.S Lewis explained this
theory in his philosophical
writing Mere Christianity, "Now what interests me about all these [argumentative] remarks is that the man
who makes them is not merely saying that the other man’s behavior does not happen to please him. He is appealing to some kind of
standard of behavior which he expects the other man to know about. And the other man very seldom replies: “To hell with your
]standard.” Nearly always he tries to make out that what he has been doing does not really go against the standard, or that if it does
there is some special reason in this particular...
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