Hunter Wetton Mrs. Kerrigan Comparative Literature 17 March 2013
Magnets attract just like a good friendship, and when two magnets repel, it is just like the break in a friendship. In the fiction novel, A Separate Peace by John Knowles, the two main characters have distinct personalities that shape their outlooks on life. Gene is very studious and takes great pride in his academics, while Finny is laid-back and more athletic, but he is not an academic. Gene has a more pessimistic outlook on life because he sees the glass as half empty, rather than half full. Finny, on the other hand, is an optimistic person. Gene loves winter because he loves being in school, but he does not think that winter loves him back. Despite the difference in their outlooks on life, these characters are drawn to each other and form a strong friendship. Since Gene is a more negative person than Finny, Finny motivates Gene to keep a more positive outlook on life. Gene usually thinks things aren’t true, but when Finny gives him advice, Gene thinks that things “should have been true” (pg.
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111). This shows that Gene has his doubts about life, and Finny is his guiding light. Although the two characters have their differences in the way they think and behave, they are there for each other to offset each other’s personalities. Gene also states “sleep suspends all but changed nothing” (pg. 106) when he was referring to Finny’s broken leg. Gene does not have any faith that someday Finny’s leg would heal miraculously and he would be back to his athletic self. Even though Gene is there to support Finny, he does not have a very optimistic outlook on his life or on Finny’s. We can tell that Gene starts to have a positive outlook on life when Finny states that “I used to be aiming for the Olympics” (pg. 117) and Gene responds by saying he would be “grooming you for the Olympics” (pg. 117). Gene, in a turn of events takes Finny’s outlook on life and becomes more optimistic. He was pessimistic before because he did not believe that loving something would give him love in return. Finny also got Gene to be
break her spirit. She still has a sunny out - look on life until a client accuses her of stealing. In this moment, she loses her belief in life, and instead sees life as a chaotic jumble of chance circumstances, devoid of meaning and purpose. Her optimism and faith in human nature is completely torn apart by one person. It leads us to question, is life fair? Did Beatrice deserve to suffer as the result of someone else’s actions? Should we let others define our happiness? The film“13 Conversations…
(9). Before they are deported, Martha offers them an escape, but the blind fear of Elie’s father prevents him from seeing the need to go with her. Unfortunately, they became too optimistic because they feared thinking otherwise. With this unwise optimism, they pass on the offer and allow the Nazi’s to sickly throw them in a cattle wagon with 80 other people. This fear to not even believe in evil, prevents them from acting upon it and allows it to spread. In the camp, the nazi’s fed on the Jew’s…
mall cop. Barriers (skin), antibacterial substances (sweat, stomach acid, saliva), phagocytes (cell eaters, digest pathogens) Specific immune response: like James Bond. Breast milk, vaccines, previous infections, pathogens, antigens, B&T cells. Genes Genotype Phenotype Stress and the stress response Stressor (event that triggers coping adjustments, knocks you out of homeostasis) vs. stress (upsetting of homeostasis, how we perceive and respond to stressor)vs. strain Eustress (positive) vs…
Exam #3 Review Sheet • Module 40 •Personality: An individual’s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting • Psychodynamic theories:Proposed that childhood sexuality and unconscious motivations influence personality. • Free association: In psychoanalysis, a method of exploring the unconscious in which the person relaxes and says what ever comes to mind, no matter how trivial or embarrassing. • Psychoanalysis: Freud’s theory of personality and therapeutic technique that attributes…
bipolar disorder and biologically related family. Although it is clear that this disorder is passed on genetically, studies have not found the reason or pattern (McCoy, 2010, p. 1). However, there have been specific genes that have been linked to bipolar disorder, which confirms that genes play a role in inheritance. "Over the past decade, a series of findings suggest that people with bipolar disorder have high levels of reward sensitivity. A growing body of evidence suggests that people with bipolar…
Contents Introduction 2 The HIV life cycle 5 Sizing up the methods 7 Altered viral vectors can help deliver 9 Gene therapy for HIV 11 System potential in HIV treatment 13 Conclusions 15 Referenced websites/sources: 18 Bibliography 18 Introduction The Sleeping Beauty (SB) transposon system was developed as a synthetic construct based on a fish gene which was gradually inactivated due to accumulated mutations (Ivics et al, 1997). It was creatively termed due to the transposon having been ‘awakened’…
The Concept of Adaptation Using Sis. Callista Roy's Model of Adaptation A Concept Analysis St. Augustine's College Exploring the Concept of Adaptation Adaptation has long been described as one of the mean tools of human and animal survival. A chameleon changes its color to hide from a predator, a child becomes withdrawn to deal with the death of a loved one or a soldier learns how to walk with a prosthetic limb after the traumatic amputation of a leg due to injury. All of these situations…
similar finding in two previously HIV-positive men. All three were no longer required to take any drug treatments. The media heralded the breakthrough, and there was anxious optimism among HIV researchers. Millions of dollars of grant funds were earmarked to bring this work to more patients. But in December 2013, the optimism evaporated. HIV had returned in both of the Boston men. Then, just this summer, researchers announced the same grim results for the child from Mississippi. The inevitable questions…
Final PSY 270 PSY 270 9/11/2011 Pamela J Reeves Final PSY 270 The subject (Marla) is a 42 year old female who is seeking help from the mental health clinic for a variety of symptoms which the subject believes is causing her distress. These symptoms include: trouble sleeping, feeling jumpy all of the time, and an in ability to concentrate. The subject, whose complaint is a decreased performance at work, feels these symptoms to be the cause. It is apparent that a concern for the subject’s…
Bipolar and Me Jamie Treese Pennsylvania Highlands Community College Try imagining being happy one second and crying the next. Can you imagine laughing and then in a bat of an eye being so angry that you could scream? I know I could but then again I have bipolar disorder, a mood disorder, which is accompanied by socialphobia. I researched bipolar disorder because I have been diagnosed with it for 12 years and would like to know more about my disorder. Some days I feel perfectly normal…