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Enter your query below to search our database containing over 45,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 2581 - 2590 of 7307 matching essays
- 2581: Biography of Karl Marx
- ... because Bonn and Berlin required an oral part to the thesis. The quickness was also a matter in this. He passed it in early April, and got his degree in history and philosophy in April 15, 1841. After graduation he was unable to find work. This caused him to take a job with the German newspaper Rheinische Zeitung in early 1842 ... revolution in Paris. The manifesto is divided into four parts, and the beginning of the entire document reads "A specter is haunting Europe" The first part outlines his ideas on history and a prediction on what is yet to come. He predicts a confrontation between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie, the working class and the higher class. Because of the main ...
- 2582: The Life and Career of Babe Ruth
- The Life and Career of Babe Ruth Babe Ruth, an American professional baseball player, is one of the most phenomenally gifted and popular players in the history of baseball. He was born in Baltimore, Maryland on February 6, 1895 with the name George Herman Ruth. He had many names. His names were Game's Greatest Hero, Babe ... 44, for a percentage of 67.6. From 1919 to the end of his career he was the outstanding outfielder of his time and one of the best in baseball history. He was particularly noted as a home run hitter. In 1927 he hit 60 home runs in 154 games, a major league record that stood until 1961, when Roger Maris ...
- 2583: Francisco Pizarro
- ... Empire10. Six years later, he completes his conquest of Peru but is assassinated June 26, at age 69 or 70, by supporters of Diego de Almagro11. Francisco Pizarro greatly changed history for some South American countries. Pizarro was considered a great and powerful explorer by the Spaniards because of what he had don to the Inca Empire. Francisco Pizarro is one of the greatest explorers in Spanish history. Bibliography 1. The Last Days of the Empire Http://www.vscwine.com/shock/index/html 2. Microsoft Encartaâ 1998 Desk Encyclopediaã . Microsoft corporation, 1996-1997. 3. Trager, James. The People ...
- 2584: Henry David Thoreau
- ... 1847. Henry's book, Walden, was published several years and seven versions later in 1854. As Henry got older, his attentions turned more towards the observing and recording of natural history in Concord. Henry kept very thorough journals of natural history and the citizens of Concord regarded him as the town naturalist and would ask him many questions regarding nature and would ask him to identify interesting creatures and plants. Many ...
- 2585: Charles Darwin: His Life Story of Dicovery
- ... genetic studies with his new idea of "Natural Selection." His theory on evolution, which held that a species had emerged from preexisting or "basic" forms. His liberal ideas in Natural History had aroused several disagreements among scientists and caused a division among them. In cognizance to Darwin’s theory(ies) scientists today gives him the credit as being the first in ... Church of England. He studied at Christ College at Cambridge University in 1828. He lost his interest in Holy order by the and became interested in something never before, Natural History. In 1831 he graduated from Cambridge with a B.A. He met many connections who were his allies in a "war" against the scientific community’s belief of how evolution ...
- 2586: Charles Darwin
- ... among them Charles Darwin's grandfather, Erasmus Darwin) had offered detailed theories of evolution (Clark, 1984, pg.24-25). Therefor the idea of evolution went very far back in Western history. At that time this concept was referred to as The Great Chain Of Life and was conceived in the middle ages, based on a mixture of classical and Biblical ideas ... devastated by a forest fire are filled by an evolution of new forms, not by the existing ones from unburned areas. We may not be able to see the entire history of evolution but from our viewpoint we have hundreds of examples of natural selection taking place all around us each and every second of each and every day. Fortunately, Charles ...
- 2587: Edgar Allan Poe
- Edgar Allan Poe Edgar Allan Poe was a bizarre and often scary writer. People throughout history have often wondered why his writings were so fantastically different and unusual. They were not the result of a diseased mind, as some think. Rather they came from a tense ... when he passed away. Insignificant in his lifetime, it was only after his death that he was appreciated. He is now acclaimed as one of the greatest writers in American history. It is indeed a pity that he will never know or care.
- 2588: Carl Jung
- ... spells. After Carl found out about his father's concern, the faints suddenly stopped, and Carl became much more studious. He had to decide his profession. His choices included archeology, history, medicine, and philosophy. He decided to go into medicine, partly because of his grandfather. Carl went to the University of Basel and had to decide then what field of medicine ... person's relationships with his own sex. The shadow contains more of man's basic animal nature than any other archetype does. Because of its extremely deep roots in evolutionary history, it is probably the most powerful and potentially the most dangerous of all the archetypes. It is the source of all that is best and worst in man, especially in ...
- 2589: Andy Warhol
- ... of others. Many critics have different viewpoints on Warhol's autobiography. He was still appreciated by those who understood his ideas. "But he had to have had some sense of history, or he wouldn't have left the diaries behind to try to explain everything to future generations" (Plagens 1732). Some realize that the diaries are rather boring, but seem to ... The reason the editor didn't fit up to par was the mere fact she wanted it to sound how Andy explained the day. "...still the book is great social history with its lip-smacking tales of loveless, sexless marriages, its gimlet-eyed view of other people's success, and its rampant unclosetings" (Trebay 1732). I, myself, found the book very ...
- 2590: Robert Mannyng of Brunne
- ... a collection of moralistic tales, also known as epiphanies, meant to show the English the errors of their sinful life. Its intimate descriptions of daily life provides a fine social history of fourteenth-century England - it is far more history than literature. On the other hand, The Chronicle of England is an epic bildungsroman largely based on fiction and myth, and uses the works of Geoffrey Crayon, Franklin of Avalon ...
Search results 2581 - 2590 of 7307 matching essays
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