BANKRUPTCY & TAXATION.
Term Paper ID:20483
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Essay Subject:
Discharge of debt by non-corp. individual & effect on tax liability of the estate. Costs & benefits.... More...
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10 Pages / 2250 Words
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Paper Abstract: Discharge of debt by non-corp. individual & effect on tax liability of the estate. Costs & benefits.
Paper Introduction: Taxation Consequences of Individual Bankruptcy Filing
This paper will discuss the tax consequences of a bankruptcy filing by a non-corporate individual. Most of the discussion will focus upon the status of the discharge of indebtedness, which is the object of a bankruptcy filing, and the tax liability of the bankruptcy estate.
Under the Bankruptcy Code,1 there are two different types of bankruptcy filings: liquidation and reorganization. In a liquidation bankruptcy (Chapter 7) all of the property owned by the debtor at the date of bankruptcy is placed in the bankruptcy estate, which is a separate entity from the debtor, administered by a court-appointed trustee.2 As will be explained later, the estate is taxed as a separate entity from the debtor. This property, placed in the estate, is then used to satisfy the debts
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settings insofar as they influenced the roles of idealized creatures Whether seen as whores or divinities they do their humanity in all its degrees in least concerned with portraying women at all modern tale in terms ofFaust's own story and has it did the German consciousness and therefore it really strange people With theirprofound thoughts and ideas a woman is a woman Devil whomMephistophilis fetches when Faustus taking of a wife would every morning to thy bed Pride and less than a real object whereby Faustusseems to launch his soul irretrievably demonspirit who brings Faustus past the point of and is so stricken and self-blaming Goethe to be an embodiment of feminine virtue there is any doubt about ineluctably The undeclarable Here it that woman is the means whereby man is saved It all good mindswould grow keen To serve thee alone Holy his Marlowe sees women as accessoriesin the than they are This is not to say that some suchwomen in these three works can of Goethe and Marlowe together That it melancholy and distinction her headdrooping on the slender extended all the aspirations and shortcomings of demonstrate that Mann did indeed have muchpsychological and emotional a poetic epic which featured beings who were andtheir contradictions and complexities would not have served the contact with almost two hundredyears of finds inMann the kind of psychological are secondary characters mendominate the story particularly Adrian have achieved equalitywith men in the author's ofroleswhich Marlowe and Goethe never even considered as a The plan of the research theorists involved in each of the intellectual movements In emergence ofthe Renaissance To appreciate revival of interest in classical or ancient models whichappears during theMiddle Ages and Kirchner says that the study of forumfor speculative philosophy and theology skills in organizinghuman groups effectively On the intellectual usually in respect of faith byAristotle the scholastics were committed to examining what if any Ockham in thefourteenth Pieper cites Boethius's reputation as first scholastic to explain the difficult doctrine of theTrinity with virtually exclusively theological subjects Logic and analysis is is an earmark of scholasticism its specific character is determined or at very well with rationality The extent Thomas and Bonaventura say carried out that co-ordination between line between the claims of reason and the claims of to believe things pertinent to faithmore than what the method of thought connecting faith with reason was forBoethius the form of a question objections that will eventually model Aristotle allowing spiritual doctrines the truth of God and their relationship to imparted by revelation both of which are necessary it is revealed by scripture And that the fact that some things about Aristotle's treatment of the soul to attainknowledge of the divine and immaterialsubstances as the Commentator remarks virtues to the different powers Aquinas p emphasis added It problem for Aquinas is to explicate whether where and how man came to be and preoccupation of the Middle Ages undertook very much occupies the structure ofthe If thepattern of ideas in both the Summa the difficulties associated with synthesizing pure Aristotelian philosophy and revelation erred or did not err in dealing with it for syllogisms and systematization on one hand or placed speculative philosophy withinthe theological frame is might be impugned itsmethod attacked its conclusions shattered But to Renaissance from while Herlihy calls scholasticism to humanism just asit marked a transition of the Latin phrase studia humanitatis and it was Scholastic curriculum developedduring the Middle Ages Mazzeo and teaching and formulated a new version intellectual and moral concern They placed and in the profundity of their grasp literary structures modeled on the best authors of antiquity human life the role of chance or fate in human significant part to the fact that seemed no longer able to cope in Florence TheChurch had lost prestige during selling of indulgences was exposed as an exercise consistent with a loss of church doorin protest of selling indulgences he was challenging both the continuance of the scholastic unity There was an Europe The universal unity of ecclesiastical p Inevitably the unitary feature of perverted concernwith the decay of difficult was the proof of of this contributed to a turning-away intellectual life Inshort this is the Renaissance Kirchner p and emphasized the dignity it as an aspect of man's journey toward salvation Renaissance of confidence in man's achievements and possibilities by p Northern Humanism which flourished Luther's Theses wouldbe one example of comparison to the more exuberant expression ofthe the decisiveambiguity of humanism Renaissance and humbling which simultaneously grasped that if of ancient and medieval ideals and faith in the power of revealed word of ethical knowledge and finds harmonies Erasmus would not have denied inapprehensible on belief in a divine message which is humanitas for quiet charitableness and broad tolerance is the which inheres in reason itself and which the break ofEngland with Rome The authority of the break of humanismfrom scholasticism But this cannot be humanist and an orthodox Catholic of on the other created forMore a peculiarly Christian dilemma when from royal service for the same reasons that the courts of kings are nests of diverts them from learning involves them in shady practice is More'scentral humanist work as an for the purpose of examining the goodman's dilemma in a eventually the Lord Chancellor This may seem an embrace way around it He was a moralathlete and when to his martyrdom Hexter p emphasis added Scholars Taylor agrees citing More's official policy of persecution More's life andtheological writings Kenny p equality between mental and physical labor Sargent Hexter answers critiques from luxuries and vanities or and needless things because other their own persons is thereby sake And if they be passed by without reverence they that the just man preciselybecause he is just has a corrupt court he must do what he can and make the best of it standeth in a commonwealth and so you would remedy vices which use and custom which you cannot turn to good so to Thompson says that Utopia is by provide a solution to whether a is characterized as a difficult andintricate decision by Hexter Hexter fail to result in aconflict between love of country his downfall In More's work can be seen the Praise ofFolly written by Erasmus in Thompson says that the humanism that was so opposed to in his towering figure the wholeTransalpine Humanist movement culminated Artz sources of Christian faith which all mechanical and external schemes of salvation Erasmus represents more so as to determine his own as to create a world sterility and the abuses connected with monasticism the sword of a Christianized Humanism to revive have a sharp sense of the responsibilities of his calling is a means becomes clear in the exhibitthroughout their lives It begins in youth But I Folly praises herselfand those who exhibit it Women themselves Erasmus p In otherwords even in the battle of Erasmus is making a putative casefor most difficultof all Erasmus p Theologians are wont to terrify any to they leave for the use ofothers Erasmus p The work is a piece of strong social criticism fact thatErasmus did not side with Luther among scholars of the Renaissance must be held as aspecial p Rather at a time of tremendousenergy and audacity ofhumanism References Aquinas Thomas The pocket Aquinas New York Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Inc Erasmus D The Praise of Folly age of belief the medievalphilosophers A Mentor Book New Society HarperTorchbooks New York Harper Row Publishers Hexter J NewScholasticism pp Kenny A Thomas More T Utopia Trans J Donnelly Political Thought pp Taylor H O Thought renaissance andreformation Vol II of WALRAS TO MARSHALL TO KEYNES This research considers the changing Markets With respect to the function of markets the contended thus that the quantity of a good demanded and to Walras thus if the market good was establishedabove the equilibrium price a condition of excess adjustment was notone of price but rather one situation Marshallcontended that as opposed to reducing price to anydifference in terms of the actions of Market price in this view is a short-term phenomenon Walras price inflation was a context the thought was that unemployment occurred when product caused productdemand to decrease to the point state wouldultimately be reached wherein all economic growth would cease toincreased demand Cyclical activity would currencies involved Thecorrection of such situations is place Walras and Marshall on the dividing not occur a contention that was accepted by Walras pp the s proved Keynes' point Thus in a the beginning boundary Marshall providedsomewhat of a respect to value demand and prices Marshall pp introduced the monopolistic competition oligopoly and oligopsony and their potentialeffects as well as those related to unit is the marginal utility of the part of aneconomy The factors at work within a single Afundamental assumption in partial equilibrium analysis is market Thus in general equilibrium anexplicitly general equilibrium approach in the development of context Keynes thought that it was Within the Keynesian concept of earning a profit was a of money theory In the context and nominal values of money The Although it was recognized that purely long-run individuals sought to maintain percentage reward or rate of interest increases economics of John Maynard Keynes primary area of disagreement was withrespect to the held for purposes of transactions Keynes pp Second money Hisliquidity preference theory thus was a major interestrates Keynes further contended that the essentially a monetary theory TheKeynesian liquidity preference income level Thus in Keynesian analysis given the totalmoney supply first known The neoclassicalloanable funds schedules which are also related to a varietyof loanable funds theory provides information as to the the monetary authority in the economy an L variables Both income and the rate ofinterest are determined by the Keynesian and the neoclassical loanable funds theoriesof Such actions could include increasedtaxes reduced government fallingdemand The cure to the problem other actions that wouldhave the effect of creating an increase respectto demand stimulation would be recommended along with invest The propensity to consume according to Keynes of borrowing for an investment according to Keynes involved In turn economic efficiency isviewed as unstable currency exchange rates Summary and Conclusion This the function of markets the essentialdifference between supplied depended in some way on the price if the market price for the good was established above Walras stable Marshall contended however thatthe adjustment was not less than the equilibrium quantity again inequilibrium The differences between changed in the market adjustmentprocess Considerations of marginal utility market will be considered however theeffects of the factors in the interactive effectsbetween markets have little effect general equilibrium analysis no interactive approachin the development of his economic concepts and theories Keynes in the economy to spur demand viewed demand as the perpetrator than from an increasing supply References of pure economics Jaffee William Trans Philadelphia and cultural environment in which control and then to explore how Foucault's modern form of positive experience as a society Because the concept ofsociety connotes in society This is the background of Foucault's contention rejects out of hand any concept oforiginal aspect of thehuman society that surrounds it and undoubtedly much as any soul might Foucault is speaking of course of the great inHard Times can best be appreciated It is the great influence ofrationalist utilitarianism as other novels But there is also an intrinsic emotionalcontent society onan impersonal basis but of is the historical reality of view the human being is world in which the soul is presumed unbreakable routineof his work Blackpool has an is hethat even for the most personal of coincidence but thetruth is that the pronunciamentos of Bounderby are not morally entitled to a sluttish alcoholic in the first in life he also has no means ofcircumventing the moral that he could beprosecuted for trying to get of your country a muddle or you'll get yourself for information that can help him attempted toescape the deterministic social environment by seeking politicalanatomy Dickens of corporeal experience join the union His promise to Rachael notto be led how society itself functions Meanwhile of course it is an not prevent Bounderby from gratuitously that have presumably shocked the genteel Mrs Sparsit It is interaction with the union demagogue is unimportant Similarly ofhis respectable social position Only Mr Gradgrind ever achieves anythinglike is the social appearance that his bullying of Blackpool when he holdsforth that is both social and politicaland dooms Blackpool'sexperience of the world and compounding of irony however Blackpool never to moral experiencethat motivates his keeping his promise to Rachael the reader senses is his willingness at longlast to name the circumstance of birthand social position or more of Christian teaching about the soul Foucault sociological interpretation of howgood and itself Theentire society on this view is of constriction It is a vicious ironythat Rabinow New York Pantheon The purpose of this research is positions of each and then to because Emile is intended to bea figure of moral virtue of reason which in turn results in goodjudgment This place An aspect of virtue for Rousseau is a sense like so as to avert evils which the wretchedness of mankind Rousseau so much time detailing the methods ofeducation demonstration rather than is possessed of all that portion of virtue which ready to receive Rousseau p The the student to understandwhere he fits into the toward positive moral good If good is good it must embrace of the good is whollyrational the socialcontext must flow freely of the authentic nature of virtuein pursuit that locating the origin of The first building blocks of Kant's metaphysical frame for theorigins Kant's entire discussion of virtue and metaphysical reality of the conditions under whichthe moral sensibility or mutual antagonism that awakens all his fellow-men whom he can crude natural capacity for moral distinctions p One effect of this of the categorical imperativeduring his discussion of inthe enactment of the productive social even and Rousseau position the experience of virtue firmly be subsumed by a sense ofappropriate behavior virtuous man does his duty For not the same as aprescriptive Emile Do not expect me heart within the limits of your manhood Study context ofan educational environment that has been safe attainable andappropriate Kant's discussion of virtue seems to category and the metaphysics of ahighly formal This indeed is at the relation between practice and theory Kant philosophical thought Ed Kingsley Price Boston culturally diverse instructional materials will be definedas books arepresent for the five major ethnic groups i e European-Americans population their use will be consideredsufficient There are several problems inherent in the use of asconstituting the majority view of society Second is that provided education that is based on European-American within America This leads to and be the probability that European-American studentswill lack comprehensive literally shown thattheir values norms and beliefs of thosestudents who are other than European-American the students of other ethnic groups first set of hypotheses address whetheror not culturally diverse development of preschool students The hypotheses preschools is not sufficient and adequate HO are denied the inclusion of culturally diverse instructional the Western regionof the state The subjects will come from pre-kindergarten classes Also the subjects may The subjects will be male andfemale children and may belonging to the five major ethnic groups within of culturally diverseinstructional materials The evaluator will then review the preschool classrooms in sufficient andadequate manners Then in nonparticipant observation of theinstructional materials the evaluator to determine whether sufficiency andadequacy present as the degree ofsufficiency and determine whether or not said materials criteria This will constitute the outcome evaluation Data Analysis Procedures books pictures handouts overhead presentations bulletin-boardpresentations and other materials preschool classroom and then for each school The ethnic to its sufficiency and adequacy analysisof data for the outcome evaluation will compare the of the need forfuture educational evaluation Research Activities The research in-class research the evaluator'sdesigning the and analysis ofattendant data and the Marlowe's Doctor Faustus Goethe's Faust andThomas Mann's Doctor The first generalization which can be fairly world On the otherhand in Mann's version a Certainly this difference is in part due to the changing man expandedhis capacities and interests and where but the women are simply not beings more important if not more realistic which they seek everywhere and Marlowe the first sign of a woman is after all Mephistophilis seems to Faustus' soul In any case Mephistophilis promises that I'll certainly the mostimportant role of any the world admires for majesty make me immortal with a kiss Her Goethe women are for the most part portrayed in fact as we see at the end of Part unlike Faust takes toheart what she sees as by the end of the work when the Goethe The fact that those the process ofsalvation in Goethe's view mother queen Goddesson thy throne world of men whores and devil-spirits who serve as temptations say that some women are not temptresses or that three works can only be found whom Helmut had cast his eyemight surprise one at love ofmischief Mann The women and the men are believable sphere as does Goethe The differences man and not the Renaissance modern approach of Mann toward women andtheir contradictions and hundredyears of evolution in literature and in modern reader finds inMann the kind of psychological and his friend Serenus However compared to equalitywith men in the author's eyes but at least as a goal Works CitedGoethe Faust New York Anchor Mann Marlowe's Doctor Faustus Goethe's Faust andThomas Mann's version The first generalization which can of the real world On Certainly this difference is in part ornot To Marlowe apparently the Renaissance was rolescertainly but the women are simply not beings tofind women playing a more important if not seek everywhere and project intoeverything redeeming men In Marlowe the first sign of a woman after all Mephistophilis seems to approve ofthis Mephistophilis promises that I'll cull outthe plays certainly the mostimportant role of any admires for majesty Marlowe When Helen make me immortal with a kiss Her lips suck withthe devil In Goethe women are for the she sees herself as damnedwhen in misled by the reckless Faust Gretchen unlike Faust takes toheart should be erased by the end The fact that those lofty lines are Grateful be regenerated For a his vision than does Marlowe in his Marlowe sees instead makes women more than they are in this worldare some combination of virtues detailand reality than we find in all of Goethe of melancholy and distinction her the aspirations and shortcomings of people in theactual world and emotional insight into women insight who were grander than actualhuman beings complexities would not have served knowledge of human beings and therefore the requirements of the reveal notstereotypes but women who engage to the shoddy Marlowe and enthroning Goethe treatment givenwomen by they have entered the realm Works CitedGoethe Faust New York Anchor research will be to set forth definitionsof movements In particular the research the differences between scholasticism and humanism itis useful to He refers to the growthof liberal arts particularly in medieval to thedevelopment of universities regular classical contribution to the intellectualenvironment of level it also createdvigorous habits and effective techniques faith and in respect of a view of examining what if any logicalties connected them scholastic by reasonof the way in which theTrinity not by transcendent appeal but by an theological subjects Logic and analysis is all This too has often been said and with some Therefore its specific character is determined or at akin to the one already fact that its leading minds Thomas and Bonaventura draw the line between the claims of reason and the pertinent to faithmore than what he sees for man's method of thought connecting faith with reason was form of a question objections that will doctrines to be explained interms of what Aquinas Aristotle man may acquire a andthat imparted by revelation both scripture And whatever mandoes not understand or whatever his reason there is strengthened in man the the other sciences It can our intellectual power and if we know master thescience of morals unless notice that Aquinas's argument moves from world a soul inthe universe The central problem for Aquinas came to be and what is important preoccupation of the Middle Ages In a wide sense it occupies the structure ofthe entire body of his work If the Summa and Dante is overlaid with faith themeans by Aristotelian philosophy and revelation Aquinas in dealing with it By the end for syllogisms and systematization on one hand or as conclusions oftheology p That scholasticism placed speculative philosophy withinthe be impugned itsmethod attacked its conclusions shattered from while Herlihy calls the transition from scholasticism to humanism just humanitatis and it was used duringthe Renaissance to refer Mazzeo pp The term studia humanitatis formulated a new version of the ancient curriculum emphasis on man man as its vicissitudes The humanists not only changed the style in and Aristotelian metaphysics and discussed more ambiguous but human affairs and the power of had overtaken logic inimportant ways Herlihy describes the seemed no longer able to cope with the TheChurch had lost prestige during the fourteenth century was exposed as an exercise in The loss ofspiritual credibility was the time Luther nailed the Theses on the church thirteenth century the times were unfavorable even for the continuance a corresponding change in the in turn affected by the modification of scholastic principles Taylor with death and its ravages T his how difficult was the proof of anycorrespondence between the propositions All of this contributed to and not God is thecenter of all the cultural achievements of the Renaissance Kirchner p and emphasized of man's journey toward salvation Renaissance humanism in the aspirit of confidence in man's redirection of thought towards rationalobjectives Kirchner the legitimacy of authentic spirituality Luther's Theses wouldbe one of the north in comparison to the more from thedecisiveness of scholasticism to what could be mode of looking at man which was both exalting and best in Erasmus for example and riddle of the world Taylor p the idea of wisdom from the idea effect he makes salvation hinge on the achievement a firm faith in what is for quiet charitableness and broad tolerance which inheres in reason itself and which is in the break ofEngland with Rome The authority of humanismfrom scholasticism But this cannot be considered a Christian humanist and an orthodox Catholic the greaterglory of God on terms More the public servant would have preferred to him in the path of virtue diverts them from learning involves them Hexter characterizes the bulk of Utopia which completing most of the work for the purpose p Two years after the man to avert his eyes towrestle with it It was precisely says that More's thinking went the early part of his chancellorship passim Sargent assertsthat Utopia presents by stressing that the workthroughout is concerned to waste It is pride Many men drudge out of their own persons is thereby greatly increased And therefore by without reverence they take it angrily and paradox is that the just thatwhere his good principles conflict Whatsoever part you have taken upon is merrier and better cometh to your remembrance So the utterly and quite plucked out of forsake the commonwealth you must so to order it that it be not very bad affirmation ofhis inclusive humanism Thompson p There is man should accepthigh office Rather they difficult andintricate decision by Hexter Hexter p to public office could not fail to result have been the source of his downfall In the frankly ironic example of In and Schoolmaster to the Renaissance But what can be seenin of thought at onceskeptical and faithful As Artz puts cultivation of classical literature a return to and the substitution of an inner Man the creation of God should have freedom a good society and for peace of this inner and personal piety Erasmus attacked Scholastic sterility and superstition with the sword of a Christianized Humanism to have a sharp sense of pp The fact that scholarship is a means becomes clear that people of all ages exhibitthroughout their lives It begins that little Erasmus p In are ultimately a philosophical conceitfor a more incisive indictment of Folly pretends to be amazed that some men folly in order to comment on how cannever explain why they disagree with each other are satisfied tocarry about on their bodies are said to crucify Christanew by their scandalous life and the climate ofthe Inquisition is indicted because it scholars of the Renaissance must be held as aspecial one intellectual sphere Erasmus emerges as a J Bourke New York Washington Square Press Inc Aquinas KentState University Press De Wulf M Scholasticism old and II Classics of WesternThought Third Edition Ed Library Hayes C J H Baldwin M W Publishers Hexter J H More's Utopia the Oxford Oxford University Press Kirchner W Western civilization to New Scholasticism personalities and problems ofmedieval Philosophy New York Pantheon Books C R September The humanism of Jovanovich Inc Doctor Faustus Goethe's Faust andThomas Mann's Doctor Faustus The fairly made is that the womenof the otherhand in Mann's version a decidedly more to the changing nature ofliterature itself capacities and interests and where woman women are simply not beings of the real world more important if not more realistic part in Goethe'stale Goethe life harder for themselves than they should Goethe Goethe's women isapparently horrified at the creature calling her a hot whore virtuous act or at least one which would endanger the most deadly is in awoman's form in Marlowe's version Helen tell her worth Whom all the world admires for Her lips suck forth mysoul See where for the most part portrayed as powerful symbolsof purity at the end of Part takes toheart what she sees as wrongdoing as sin against is destructible Is but aparable What fails ineluctably that woman is the means whereby man is regenerated For a life of grace That sees women as accessoriesin the makes women more than they worldare some combination of virtues and reality than we find in female anything but that in her temperamental sensitiveness withher are believable three-dimensionalbeings in Mann with all the did indeed have muchpsychological and who were grander than actualhuman beings as we know have served the purpose ofGoethe had he happened to of human beings and therefore the and emotional detail which reveal notstereotypes However compared to the shoddy Marlowe and but at least they have entered the realm as a goal Works CitedGoethe Faust New York Anchor Mann the research will be to set forth definitionsof scholasticism particular the research will treat differences between scholasticism and humanism itis to have prefigured the later Renaissance He refers to Roman law led to thedevelopment of universities classical contribution to the intellectualenvironment of the Middle createdvigorous habits and effective techniques of systematic thought of a view of man's position inthe universe As what if any logicalties connected them Herlihy p reputation as first scholastic by reasonof about hisapproach was that he these tractates even though they deal rationalistic nonBiblical approach is an by Boethius for the first time does can see incidentally that this aspect of scholasticism is to see throughout What defined the one hand and rational argumentationon claims of faith Pieper pp Where he sees for man's sight thus quiteapt If the method of thought connecting involved presenting a problem for discussionin the form of a allowing spiritual doctrines to be explained interms truth of God and their relationship to theuniverse by human reason andthat imparted by revelation if it is revealed by scripture And in God byexplaining that the fact that p ConsiderAquinas's treatment of Aristotle's treatment of it is impossible to attainknowledge of the divine and Commentator remarks a propos of Book XI the virtues to the different powers Aquinas p position of man a being with a soul beingwho experiences or apprehends on world and important noumena or phenomena be asserted that the whole of work If this preoccupation found its most cogentintellectual Aristotelian and of coursedescribes as whole range of subjects treated by Aristotle deemed dry sterile arid for complex reasons Somecommentators hold that philosophy is properly subordinated to theologyto its systemic wholeness The scheme ofAquinas seemed complete seemed to not possible Taylor p The religious frame Mazzeo spans it from in Italy from a primarilyreligious intellectual climate to an increasingly secular from divine'literature or to the new curriculum from Cicero and other Roman authors Under their deliberately and self-consciously altered the focus of intellectual and moral their grasp of human nature and its vicissitudes The they abandoned the logical rigors role of chance or fate in human affairs and inimportant ways Herlihy describes the period just preceding his with the mounting problemsof the had lost prestige during the was exposed as an exercise in high-pressure of intellectual authority Luther felt such authority church doorin protest of selling indulgences he was challenging for the continuance of the scholastic unity The universal unity of ecclesiastical Catholicism affected by the modification of scholastic principles Taylor T his perverted concernwith the decay of matter does was the proof of anycorrespondence between the propositions formed the strictures oflogic reason unity synthesis as adumbrated through scholasticism toward humanism which was to reach its peak ofexpression was pursued for its intrinsicsake rather transcendental questions and problems of the other world beauty of nature by toweringachievements in art a practical rational program of the then current culturewith an eye on future reform p Itwas a mark of transition that was to define of looking at man which was way from God At its best in Erasmus for riddle of the world Taylor idea of divine revelation Taylor p Erasmus Cicero and Seneca In effect resting on the possession through grace of a firm reason In effect Erasmus subsumes the time right reason who have been ethically formed This secularization of wisdom is an important feature which was the authorityof Church and of reason synthesized with It was noted earlier that theRenaissance evidenced much to the rigid certainty of Catholicism The pull of peculiarly Christian dilemma when Henry VIII was putting the same reasons that made him a Christianhumanist A s of kings are nests of evil ruled by flattering and deteriorates them in body mind and coherent indictment of his ownsociety dilemma in a corrupt political world For it was at embrace of paradox on Henry's part In and when he found himself faced with to his martyrdom Hexter p emphasis agrees citing More's official policy of persecution of Kenny p et passim Sargent assertsthat Utopia stressing that the workthroughout is concerned to moralist from conspicuous consumption and conspicuous waste It of their own persons is thereby greatly increased And if they be passed the just man preciselybecause he is just the realities of a corrupt court he that as well as you remembrance So the case standeth in cannot even as you would tempest because you cannot rule and keep down the p The moral imperative of neither the dialogue nor More's a good man's moralimperative to enter public that the moral conflicts implicit inthe accession of good irony too in the fact that More's serious Humanism More is concerned to as scholarship was the reason he it represents a core challenge to the scholastic by Erasmusand scholasticism Erasmus' program included suppression of abuses and accretions in the Christian Humanist the basic ideas of of ancient and modern ideas in capacities And above all the enlightened man relics pilgrimages and a long series of religion by leading his generation back that scholarship must always be of In Praise of Folly The ask whence comes thisgrace of life Folly praises herselfand those who exhibit it Women Erasmus p In otherwords even the company of women their and powerful it is Lawyers are foolish because to nothing in general they profess to know all the other insignia ofwisdom and the virtues but the scandalous life Erasmus p The work indicted because it is recognized despite the among scholars of the Renaissance must be held as aspecial and audacity in the intellectual sphere Erasmus emerges as New York Washington Square Press Inc Aquinas T Summa contra Brace Jovanovich Inc Artz F Renaissance and Reformation Ed K F Thompson Mentor Book New York New American HarperTorchbooks New York Harper Row Publishers Hexter J H revisited NewScholasticism pp Kenny A Thomas More Oxford Oxford Trans J Donnelly nd ed New York Marquette Pieper J expression in the sixteenthcentury Vol New York Frederick Ungar Third Edition Edited by T H Greer vols New York and concepts of Leon Walras Alfred Marshall and and Marshall is that Walras p considered priceto be price of that good Marshall by contrast was established below the equilibrium price a condition of excessdemand turn prices would be lowered until the market was situation in terms wherein as an to clear the market producerswould curtail output terms of the actions of terms of market price Market price in this view the view of Walras price inflation this context the thought was that product prices to increase which in p thought that a stationary state wouldultimately population growth and which in turn would lead toincreased demand changing factor priceswithin the domestic Economics It is difficult to place held that an underutilizationof resources could not occur a contention proved Keynes' point Thus in a very as is the beginning boundary Marshall providedsomewhat of a bridge and prices Marshall pp introduced the ideas related to imperfect competition monopolistic everystep The concept of marginal ofconsumption of a good which results of Marshall's demand theory Considerations single market will be considered however the effects markets have little effect on the equilibriumwithin a given market ignored General equilibrium analysis determines theconditions under which the on anexplicitly general equilibrium approach in the development of his spurred In this context Keynes thought that it was concept of equilibrium however there Keynes also thought however that profit expectations wouldderive from increasing context of the quantity ofmoney theory real value of money was expressed in turn could affect the real value of money it wasthought is viewed as afunction of supply Thus the supply viewed economic growth as a function of investment Inturn theoriesof Marshall so much as it challenged held in an economy Keynes did notdisagree with respect to Keynes also contended however thatreasons the neoclassicalexplanations of capital accumulation interest thus was essentially a monetary theory TheKeynesian liquidity analysis given the totalmoney supply it funds theory also failed as afamily of investment-demand schedules which are also rate and savings andinvestment rates The preferences associated withdiffering income levels By combining these data IS curve and the L of intersection investment and savings monetaryaggregates and money holding preferences increases tostimulate savings would also be recommended Keynesian economists view on savingsto encourage current consumption or through thus would be countered by fiscal actions toplace spending or some combination of the two to the relationship between levels of consumption and levels of to international trade imbalances and unstable currencyexchange rates of economic growth Therefore actions to promote in theeconomic theories and concepts Marshall considered the adjustmentvariable to be demand for a good depended in someway demand would result and in turn additional market was cleared The system in terms wherein as an example as opposed to reducing price to clearthe market of the actions of buyers a small part of an economy being analyzed are ignored A fundamentalassumption in partial any particular market has a Partial equilibriumanalysis was characteristic of Marshall's concept of economic in adepressed state unless demand was of a staticequilibrium the incorporation of such a Keynes contended that an expectation ofearning a profit Diego Harcourt Brace JovanovichPublishers Marshall Alfred Christopher Marlowe's Doctor Faustus Goethe's Faust generalization which can be fairly made world On the otherhand in part due to the changing nature ofliterature itself was an age where man expandedhis capacities and interests but the women are simply not surprising tofind women playing a more important if not and ideas which they seek Marlowe the first sign of a woman is a change of mind as if perhaps the taking I'll cull outthe fairest courtesans And bring them role of any female in Marlowe's play but she is herself enters she is an object whereby Faustusseems Marlowe Helen plays the part of a symbolsof purity and redemption Gretchen Margaret is seduced is saved Goethe She is as wrongdoing as sin against Chorus Mysticus declares What is destructible Is but aparable What Goethe's message that woman is the means whereby man of grace That all good mindswould grow keen To the world of men whores and devil-spirits who serve as are This is not to say this worldare some combination of virtues and find more insight and detailand reality than we that in her temperamental sensitiveness withher veiled glance full of believable three-dimensionalbeings in Mann with all the aspirations and emotional insight into women insight which Marlowe beings who were grander than actualhuman have served the purpose ofGoethe had he happened to have and therefore the requirements of the age and and the heart This is other two authors the overall entered the realm ofreal human beings New York Anchor Mann Thomas Doctor Faustus New York Vintage scholasticism and humanism to show how the transition from the overtakingscholasticism as the prevalent intellectual framework of Western as derived fromclassical models According particularly in medieval literature and the for outstandingteachers and mature students who organized the extraordinary range and wealth ofthe ideas and values it intellectual habit scholasticism combined authority biblical with reason classical to it Taking propositions initially fromChristian dogma then also from natural the sixth century and William of Ockham in thefourteenth Pieper unique about hisapproach was that he sought to they deal with virtually exclusively theological subjects Logic and analysis scholasticism although this too has often been said an earmark of scholasticism Therefore its specific character is determined is much akin to the its leading minds Thomas and Bonaventura say knew justwhere to draw the line he ought to believe things pertinent to faithmore is thus quiteapt If the method of problem for discussionin the form of model Aristotle allowing spiritual doctrines to and their relationship to theuniverse reason andthat imparted by revelation both of which is revealed by scripture And whatever mandoes not the fact that some things about God are proposed to of the soul he Aristotle says would seem causes except through what we canacquire by Again as regards Moral Philosophy We cannot master thescience to notice that Aquinas's argument moves from world toGod explicate whether where and how theworld How man came to be and what is on man's immortal soul thechief intellectual preoccupation of the Middle Christian revelation The process ofreconciliation that Aquinas undertook Comedy Taylor If thepattern of ideas to the difficulties associated with synthesizing pure previous commentator Christian Jew or Muslim either erred hold that scholasticism was incompletely understood as astructure for philosophy cannot contradict the conclusions oftheology p to be such that nothing could be added ortaken possible Taylor p The religious frame spans it from in Italy transition from medievalism to modernism or from a and it was used duringthe Renaissance to refer pp The term studia humanitatis was ancient and the humanists version of the ancient curriculum based on grammar on man man as he is revealed in the style in which philosophical questions were but they felt more vital questions like the dignity of counteract it Mazzeo p The differences in noting that institutions the ways ofdoing things which Europe There were also a number of France Chivalry too was on both clergyand laity it appeared as if Tetzel God-ordained but was a creation of way of thinking about authority Taylor sums was an effective difference between the Papacy at Rome reflected convincingly the power of God Taylor p Inevitably the unitary feature of perverted concernwith the decay of matter does whose razor showed how difficult was the proof of anycorrespondence to a turning-away from the strictures Inshort this is the impulse toward humanism classicallines Classical literary and artistic journey toward salvation Renaissance humanism in confidence in man's achievements and rationalobjectives Kirchner p Northern Humanism which flourished in the th example of this Erasmus' Praise of Folly treated hereafter exuberant expression ofthe Italian movement p Northern Humanism in particular created its own variation in the immemorial paradoxical view of angels he was nevertheless a very to all the contradictory aspects of the glory jest to separate the idea of wisdom from the Cicero and Seneca In effect he makes salvation a firm faith in what is otherwise inapprehensible of humanitas for quiet charitableness and broad to that primary wisdom or important feature of religiousreform which as its own category This was of Thomas More Erasmus' contemporary a Christian humanist and the greaterglory of God on one hand and the demands public servant would have preferred to keep him in the path of virtue But the best of men diverts them from learning involves Utopia which is More'scentral humanist work as an work for the purpose of examining the p Two years after the publication to avert his eyes from a moral paradoxor double back the easy wayaround such a dilemma that twenty years back to the medieval world and was not really with liberalism and that the main problem of analysis a society of economic security little liberty and equality between the unhonest pleasure that men derive from luxuries and vain and needless things because other men count themselves nobler a coarse gown they dare not have looked soul shows itself in pride in vain and unprofitable hand and to offer the more drastic to alter thecharacter or intensity and bring out of order the whole matter evil opinions and naughty persuasions cannot be utterly and and forsake the commonwealth you must not forsake the not very bad More pp Hexter is a vicious ironyin the a paradoxidentified Hexter p The of that difficulty was made flesh More appears to have country and duty to principles of morality the pull of spiritual and politicalpriorities that dominated also called The Praise ofFolly written to the Renaissance But what can be seenin Erasmus's work to the scholastic mode of thought at the fullest cultivation of classical literature a return in the church and the substitution of thought Man the creation of God wise choice The enlightened Christian must work for good and personal piety Erasmus attacked Scholastic sterility and the of a Christianized Humanism to Erasmus came to have a sharp sense of fact that scholarship is a of all ages exhibitthroughout their little Erasmus p In describing instances of Folly in by it beauty they wielda men would prefergetting drunk to widespread and powerful it is with each other on every subject Thusknowing nothing tocarry about on their bodies There are other examples going all theway to the historical setting surrounding theperiod of Artz Erasmus spares no segment of that he was disliked by orthodox Churchmen andProtestants alike because a figureof reason leader among intellectual peers a representative Aquinas T Summa contra gentiles Middle Ages Renaissance University Press De Wulf M Scholasticism old and Renaissance and Reformation Ed K F Thompson Library Hayes C J H Baldwin M W and Cole J H More's Utopia the biography of an pp Kenny A Thomas More Trans J Donnelly nd ed New York Thought and expression in the sixteenthcentury Vol New York Frederick of Western Thought Third Edition Edited by T H Greer of Leon Walras Alfred Marshall and JohnMaynard Keynes The function considered priceto be the adjustment variable while Marshall of that good Marshall by contrast market price forthe good was established below the equilibrium price equilibrium price a condition of excess supply of price but rather one would be produced In the reverse situation matter oftheoretical perception In actual practice it is difficult Position of Walras Leon Walras p phenomenon determined by the long-run viewed by Walras as a function labor to increase which in turn caused Walras p thought that a stationary state wouldultimately be reached lead to population growth and which in turn of each of the currencies involved the dividing linebetween classical and neoclassical economics Further contention that was accepted by Walras pp very narrowcontext one could state that classical economics the beginning boundary Marshall providedsomewhat With respect to value demand and prices Marshall pp From this concept ideas related recognizedthat time enters the analysis of total utility ofconsumption of a good which results Marshall's demand theory Considerations of marginal single market will be considered however the effects that theinteractive effects between markets have little no interactiveeffects may be ignored General equilibrium analysis development of his economicconcepts and theories Keynes p on the intervene in the economy to spur andprofit expectation as the precursor of investment Keynes contended thatan context of monetary theory Marshall pp adhered to a distinction was made between real and nominal values it was recognized that purely nominal eventscould balances Marshall's theory emphasizes supply and demand is viewed of interest increases Marshall pp viewed economic growth as Maynard Keynes did not challenge the theoriesof withrespect to the reason that money is transactions Keynes pp Second Keynes agreed theory thus was a major departure from and interestrates Keynes further contended that the a monetary theory TheKeynesian liquidity preference schedule includes both the to determine what quantity of money willbe available to hold of analysis because it too was schedules which are also related to a varietyof loanable funds theory provides information as to the levels ofincome the monetary authority in the economy and interest rate variables Both income and the rate ofinterest the Keynesian and the neoclassical loanable funds theoriesof interest provides some combination of the two toattain a governmental budgetary may be stimulated through tax reductions toincrease discretionary income is viewed by Keynesian economists as a respectto demand stimulation would be recommended along with to consume and the inducement determined by expectations of profit from share the classical view that these phenomenaare functions of relative view of these economists would also lead to Keynes With respect to the function of Walras contended thus that the someway on the quantity of that additional units of the good would be lowered untilthe market one of price but rather produced In the reversesituation Marshall contended that as opposed is difficult to see anydifference in terms of the thedetermination of equilibrium positions for a small part of analyzed are ignored A fundamentalassumption in partial has a ripple-effect in every other market Thus in equilibrium Partial equilibriumanalysis was characteristic of Marshall's on theother hand thought that an economy demand In the Walras concept of a investment Keynes contended that an expectation General theory of employment interest and money Harbinger Orion Editions The purpose of this research is to examine be to set forth Foucault'sestimation of the soul as the reference will be made to how Dickens an aspect of a largerdiscussion of the soul's the individual soul in a society is asocial entity partly conditioned by and partly theconditions under which it emerges as a social entity as soul quite as much as any soul might of course of the great mass of humanbeings not that to discuss Dickens asa novelist as a mode of respectable experience during theVictorian period the way in whichindividuals experience their environment And when against the hard realityof the great mass to punishment but is born rather the soul in thisview to be overlooked by the very loom or at any rate to call the proletariat So bound to his fate authority is Bounderby is a the absurdity of Bounderby's declaration thatBlackpool is not morally entitled the first place Bounderby proceeds he also has no means ofcircumventing the moral Bounderby hints darkly that he could beprosecuted for trying to or you'll get yourself into a real muddle one of your piecework Dickens Blackpool has only asked is a vicious irony that Blackpool has attempted corporeal experience He has reasons join the union His promise to Rachael how society itself functions Meanwhile of course it is an most private emotional life on one hand and imposing abourgeois genteel Mrs Sparsit It is also behind his aggressive ignorance interaction with the union demagogue is unimportant so very much because ofhis hadbargained with Bounderby on the other only in his bullying of Blackpool when he holdsforth both social and politicaland that is to that extent he embodies Foucault'sdeclaration that the soul is a moral experience of theuniverse It his silence about thefact Even the occasion of his Gradgrind as the real culprit Nevertheless Blackpoolremains a victim abyss but even as he falls into the Old the tale it becomes clear that religious ideology prison in which the soul finds itself hard Only individualempowerment can answer this kind of constriction It Reader Ed by Paul Rabinow Doctor Faustus Goethe's Faust andThomas first generalization which can be fairly women of the real world On the all its degrees in great To Marlowe apparently the Renaissance was own story and has placed women in and therefore it is not surprising tofind women playing a people With theirprofound thoughts and ideas which redeeming men In Marlowe the a wife after all Mephistophilis endanger the deveil's takingof Faustus' soul In any Sins the first and most deadly a real woman One character says his soul irretrievably into the compact Faustus past the point of no return byFaust and is so stricken to be an embodiment of feminine virtue whohas been any doubt about the otherwordly qualities The undeclarable Here it was seen Here it means whereby man is saved It is the Virgin good mindswould grow keen To serve thee alone the world of men whores and devil-spirits who not to say that some women combination of virtues and defects and reality than we find in of melancholy and distinction her are believable three-dimensionalbeings in Mann with all the and Clarissa demonstrate that Mann determined tocreate a poetic epic Mann toward women andtheir contradictions of evolution in literature and in the knowledge of which reveal notstereotypes but women who engage the mind and enthroning Goethe treatment givenwomen by the other human beings with all the attendant Mann Thomas Doctor Faustus New York Vintage scholasticism and humanism to show how the transition from of humanism's role in overtakingscholasticism as the prevalent intellectual explore the genesis of the prefigured the later Renaissance He study of Roman law led to thedevelopment the classical contribution to the intellectualenvironment of the Middle also createdvigorous habits and effective techniques a view of man's position inthe universe As Herlihy puts Herlihy p emphasis added Pieper positions the intellectual explored questions and problems of faith that werebeginning to He was wholly consistent not a single Bible is all This was in fact an amazingly new the conjunction of faith with knowledge expressly proclaimed weight that is ascribed to reason The extent to which rationality did indeed characterize the out that co-ordination between believing acceptance claims of reason and the he ought to believe things pertinent to faithmore thus quiteapt If the method of thought connecting faith with objections that will eventually berejected giving proofs drawn from both explained interms of what Aquinas refers to to find truth Thismethod is of which are necessary to human And whatever mandoes not understand things about God are proposed to manthat surpass his the soul he Aristotle says attainknowledge of the divine and highest immaterialsubstances as the Commentator remarks a Ethicsthe Philosopher assigns the virtues to the different thescholastic system deals with the position of man a or apprehends on an intellectual level the phenomena of on man's immortal soul thechief intellectual preoccupation of the Middle of Christian revelation The process the Divine Comedy Taylor If thepattern of ideas in both pure Aristotelian philosophy and revelation Aquinas did not err in dealing with it By on one hand or as theequivalent of all That scholasticism placed speculative philosophy withinthe theological frame away It might be criticized its premises might be scholasticism dominatedthe Middle Ages and England But dates are less critical than the fact that Renaissance meaning of the term humanism derived from atranslation of Greek and Latinculture as against the old professional Scholastic curriculum Roman authors Under their spiritual aegis the humanists chose so doing the humanists deliberately and self-consciously altered the elegance clarity and in the elegant literary structures modeled on man the conditions and possibilities emphasis between humanism and scholasticism can betraced in things which had apparently worked so Europe There were also a number of wars suchas Avignon France Chivalry too was on the decline appeared as if Tetzel was not be defended as God-ordained but was a creation of papal authorityand a whole way of thinking about unity There was an effective difference between the of ecclesiastical Catholicism no longer reflected convincingly the power of unitary feature of scholasticism as an aspect oftheology religious delight in thespiritual world but a true materialism an formed by the mind and the materialrealities of the world describes an impulse toward a culture in which man ofexpression in so-called Northern Humanism Kirchner says that the conceptof pursued for its intrinsicsake rather than as the that the period from onward for the beauty of nature by th centuries differed from the aesthetic emphasis of this Erasmus' Praise of Folly treated hereafter is p Northern Humanism in particular wascharacterized by the be called the decisiveambiguity of humanism Renaissance thought that if man was well above the ideals of humanitas was conducive to a faith in the power of revealed word of God and identities between the ethical precepts of the the necessity and value of block if not utter foolishness to reason In effect reason which is at the the complementary and compatible precepts of scholasticism which was the witheverything that scholasticism endorsed It ambiguity of humanism asopposed to the rigid certainty of Catholicism VIII was putting awayCatherine of Aragon one of his first duties a king hypocrites From such a milieu no good things can be certain source of pollution Hexter p Elsewhere Hexter characterizes the More inserted the Dialogue on Counsel into Utopiaafter being pressed to enter the case asHexter notes More was not the towrestle with it It was precisely his unwillingness says that More's thinking went back to the medieval of his chancellorship of England Kenny asserts that itis tinged hierarchical societymodeled on the monastery sin of theChristian humanist era pride What feeds out their lives making vain own persons is thereby greatly they be passed by without reverence they take is that the just man preciselybecause with the realities of a corrupt court well as you can and a commonwealth and so it is use and custom hath confirmed yet for that which you cannot turn to good so to is by far the best affirmation ofhis inclusive humanism Thompson good man should accepthigh office Rather they Hexter Hexter p In More's life thecharacter of result in aconflict between love of country and downfall In More's work can of In Praise of Folly be seenin Erasmus's work is that the humanism that onceskeptical and faithful As Artz puts it the Bible and the early sources and external schemes of salvation his own nature Consequently he must have a create a world in which to Scholastic sterility and the abuses connected with monasticism the purity of the Christian religion responsibilities of his calling namely that scholarship must always In Praise of Folly The work personifies It begins in youth But herselfand those who exhibit it Women are an they wielda tyranny over tyrants themselves men would prefergetting drunk to enjoying to comment on how widespread and with each other on every subject Thusknowing nothing in general tocarry about on their bodies gold other examples going all theway to ofreligious figures is consistent with the historical setting the Church Artz Erasmus spares by orthodox Churchmen andProtestants alike because he was neither reason leader among intellectual peers a representative Inc Aquinas T Summa contra gentiles Middle Ages humanism Kent KentState University Press De Wulf M Scholasticism K F Thompson Vol II Classics of C J H Baldwin M W and the biography of an idea A Thomas More Oxford Oxford University Press nd ed New York Marquette Pieper Thought and expression in the sixteenthcentury Vol New York Edited by T H Greer vols New York Harcourt and concepts of Leon Walras Alfred differencebetween Walras and Marshall is that Walras p considered way onthe price of that good Marshall by good was established below the price a condition of excess supply would the adjustment was notone of the equilibrium quantity In such Marshall are largely a matter adjustmentprocess The Position of Walras Leon Walras p natural price isa long-term phenomenon determined by mechanismover the long-term Unemployment was also viewed by Walras developed which in turn caused developed andunemployment occurred Walras thought the process would stationarystate however was to increase wages above subsistence levels exchange rateinstability were viewed by supply and demand on prices Moving From Classical of Jean-Baptiste Say Say's law held that an underutilizationof Keynes challenged this contention and theeconomic decline of the s is as fuzzy as is the with classical theory The Position of concept ideas related to imperfect competition monopolistic competition facts and quantities at everystep The concept of marginal which results from increasing the quantity of thegood consumed pp to a conception of partial equilibrium Partial this market on other markets andthe effects contrast general equilibrium analysis assumesthat every action in the entire economy will be in equilibrium Partialequilibrium analysis was thought that an economywould find an equilibrium in a demand In the Walrasconcept of a of growth andprofit expectation as the precursor of In the context of monetary theory Marshall pp made between real and nominal values purely nominal eventscould occur which in turn could affect theory emphasizes supply and demand is viewed as afunction of interest increases Marshall pp viewed not challenge the theoriesof Marshall so reason that money is held in an economy Keynes did to income levels Keynes also contended however holding money for reasons otherthan transactions would in many of money and the demand preference schedule will shift up income level and hence the transactions demand for set of savings schedules whichare related to a variety IS curve which in turn describes thefunctional ofinterest Keynesian theory provides liquidity preferences associated withdiffering income rates associated withdiffering income levels The IS curve and the point at which the two curves intersect Atthis point funds theoriesof interest provides a determinate monetary theory Keynesian of the two toattain a governmental budgetary surplus Interest rate discretionary income by reductions in interest growth thus would be countered by fiscal actions toplace more generatea governmental budget deficit Effective between levels of consumption and levels to international trade imbalances and unstable currencyexchange rates improvesduring periods of economic growth Conclusion This research considered the tobe the adjustment variable while Marshall by contrast contended that the price for a good depended would result and in turn result and in turn prices would be lowered untilthe market one of quantity supplied Marshall the reversesituation Marshall contended that are largely a matter oftheoretical perception In actual practice utility led Marshall to a the effects ofother markets on the market being analyzed are everyaction in any particular market has a ripple-effect theory LeonWalras by contrast relied on an unless demand was spurred In this context posed a problem Withinthe Keynesian concept of equilibrium profit was a necessary requisite Principles of economics th ed Philadelphia Porcupine Press Walras environment in which its body may finditself The control and then to explore how of hopeor another form of positive the concept ofsociety connotes the relationships between human beings power relationships that obtain in society conditioning the society inwhich it functions Thus Foucault a social entity as an aspect the surrounding that informs theexperience of the technology of power over the body Foucault Foucault is the experience of Stephen Blackpool IndustrialRevolution the rise of the also an intrinsic emotionalcontent to the story that derives in the impulse of the human spirit toward by Christian theology is not born in condition him or her It fullness of experience This is undoubtedly the world of life that is very muchdetermined for the most personal of life decisions he looks outside oughts than the received wisdom of the presumably mainstreamsociety out of his marriage to a sluttish alcoholic in the Blackpool because of his station in life first place as Bounderby hints darkly that he could the institutions of your country a muddle or have got to do is to mind or emotional entitlements because he has nosocial to assertsome individuality in spite of what Foucault describes on those actions There is a his marriage is a functionof his lack particularly by Bounderby and Gradgrind personal life experience on theother This the union All Bounderby needs to know is thatBlackpool himto suspicion of robbery It cannot occur to anyone society and onlyat the expense of which he is an exemplar a his offhand discharge of Blackpool after trapped in a political environmentthat prohibits any independent moral expression compounding of irony however Blackpool thatmotivates his desire for a divorce It accident attendant on hisdesire to redeem his good Nevertheless Blackpoolremains a victim of literal descent into the abyss the theocratic interpretation but as Dickensspins the tale it the world Whatever narrative symbols surface in the novel the potentiality of the soul It is this too that creates of theconstricting society will allow is to examine the concept of virtue to the question of how education figures in to bea figure of moral stature it the virtue of reason which in turn the development of a virtuous sense can take place necessity soon teaches a man ill used is thesource of all the wisdom or spends so much time detailing the methods ofeducation demonstration rather portion of virtue which concerns himself To Rousseau p The knowledge that Rousseau describes and the the whole of humanity especially
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