Sunday, November 27, 2011
9. Media: Meaningful or Madness?
The outlets of information seem increasingly limitless—it’s not just Diane Sawyer or David Letterman broadcasting facts or conjecture over airwaves. Virtually anyone with access to Internet can reach out and connect with millions of others. Obviously that can be very good, very bad and everything in-between. Chapter 11 offers some challenging observations about this relatively new social phenomena. Read through the sub-topics and choose a section that interests you. Write about it and how it relates to your interests. 75-100 words.
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
8. Ethical Dilemmas
It’s easy to point the Finger of Guilt at well-known personalities or entities who defy the standards of ethics, moral and values on a grand scale and the consequences are far-reaching.
What is difficult is to examine the common violations of our more personal standards, especially the ones that we become immune to noticing—because we see them so often or we may know someone guilty of such action,or perhaps we are guilty of some of them ourselves.
It can be as simple as taking home a handful of paperclips from our job to knowlingly accepting and keeping the incorrect change (in our favor, of course) from the grocery store cashier.
Your task is to describe three common ethical dilemmas and offer some suggestions of how a person could or should turn the situation around.
Remember Kant’s Categorical Imperative:
“Act only according to that maxim by which you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law.”
In other words, if it’s OK for you, then it should be OK for everyone, everywhere and every time. Hmmmm
What is difficult is to examine the common violations of our more personal standards, especially the ones that we become immune to noticing—because we see them so often or we may know someone guilty of such action,or perhaps we are guilty of some of them ourselves.
It can be as simple as taking home a handful of paperclips from our job to knowlingly accepting and keeping the incorrect change (in our favor, of course) from the grocery store cashier.
Your task is to describe three common ethical dilemmas and offer some suggestions of how a person could or should turn the situation around.
Remember Kant’s Categorical Imperative:
“Act only according to that maxim by which you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law.”
In other words, if it’s OK for you, then it should be OK for everyone, everywhere and every time. Hmmmm
Friday, November 11, 2011
7. Silver Blaze
The story Silver Blaze demonstrates Critical Thinking in action You now know the story and the world’s famous detective, Sherlock Holmes. Discuss the following in 75-100 words.
This tale is an exercise in deductive reasoning. Write about the clues that Holmes pulled together to solve the mystery of Silver Blaze. What happened to Silver Blaze and why? Who was Strayker and what was his part in the mystery? What was the rationale of the barking dog? What was Mr. Simpson up to that fateful evening? Why did Holmes ask Mrs. Strayker if he met her at a social event previously? What particular clues did Holmes explain to the others? Take any one of Holmes’ suppositions and write a simple (three conditional propositions) chain argument.
This tale is an exercise in deductive reasoning. Write about the clues that Holmes pulled together to solve the mystery of Silver Blaze. What happened to Silver Blaze and why? Who was Strayker and what was his part in the mystery? What was the rationale of the barking dog? What was Mr. Simpson up to that fateful evening? Why did Holmes ask Mrs. Strayker if he met her at a social event previously? What particular clues did Holmes explain to the others? Take any one of Holmes’ suppositions and write a simple (three conditional propositions) chain argument.
Thursday, November 3, 2011
SALEM TRIALS:THING OF THE PAST?
Salem Trials: A Modern Metaphor?
Can the same kind of instinctual prejudice and fear that took over a small Massachusetts village more than 300 years ago take over the minds in modern society sparking “witch hunts” to estrange certain members of our society, encourage condemnation of those who may have different beliefs, attitudes and practices and finally, creating separate rules and sentences of alienation for anyone who does not follow the current social mores and fads? If so, how does it do so? If not, why?
Think about our recent class examination of The Salem Witch Trials and compare it to modern issues in politics, religion, school bullying, family values and our American society -at-large. How does our modern media affect society’s attitudes in these cases?
Please write a 150-200 word insightful response to this examination.
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