Monday, October 31, 2016

In "There Will Come Soft Rains," what line tells what happened to the city?

Throughout the story "There Will Come Soft Rains," Ray Bradbury includes certain details that create a desolate, sad setting, including a description of what happens to Allendale, California after a nuclear strike. After beginning the story with a description of a mechanical house that is going on about its business despite no humans being present, the narrator pans out and shows the house from a third-person point of view:



"The house stood alone in a city of rubble and ashes. This was the one house left standing. At night the ruined city gave off a radioactive glow which could be seen for miles."



After showing that the entire city is destroyed, the narrator zooms back onto the house, focusing on its outside where the shadows of the former occupants have been burned into the side.


Both images, the demolished city and the shadows of the home's deceased occupants, contribute to this story's larger ideas that the mechanical things we create are meaningless if we destroy ourselves.

What is the most compelling theory for why some cultures consider insects a delicacy and others don't?

In many ways, insects can play the role of either friend or foe. We tend to avoid those insects which are poisonous or are considered pests, but some cultures around the world regularly eat bugs. (Many more will resort to eating bugs in times of nutritional stress!) So what's the big deal? Why do some cultures treasure insects as a special snack, and others might feel nauseous at the thought of crunching on a bug? I think that in order to properly address this question, we must consider the impact geography and climate play in the development of cuisine. 


In parts of the world where other forms of animal protein are scarce, eating insects is a great addition to the diet. Many species of insects like grasshoppers, beetles, and worms are high in protein and essential vitamins and minerals. When it comes down to terms of survival, you'd be silly to pass up a nutritious insect. Some cultures, like that of North Thailand, have so come to embrace the nutty flavor and crunch of insects that they are commonly sold as snacks. In China, which has a long tradition of discovering the medicinal properties of countless plants and animals, insects may be used for their therapeutic qualities in soups, stir-fries, and infusions in liquor. When one grows up in a culture where insects are thought to have special medicinal properties, he or she might come to consider insects a delicacy.


There are certainly a few benefits to eating insects: there's almost always lots of them, they require little effort to raise, they have minimal impact on the environment, and they're very nutritious for their size. Nonetheless, the general idea of eating insects comes with the risk of either a bad taste or ingesting poison. For a culture which has a proliferation of poisonous insects, it isn't likely that a tradition of eating insects would develop. 


One of the main concerns expressed by those who are grossed out at the thought of eating bugs is that it might not be sanitary. I can only speak for myself, but I know that growing up in the United States, I was taught that bugs are dirty and associated with things like fecal matter, dirt, and decay. Even if someone were to present me with a cockroach which had been born and raised in captivity and fed exclusively on "clean" foods, I would feel grossed out at the idea of eating a bug with a reputation of being dirty! The same goes for critters like worms—we tend to think of them in terms of pestilence and spoiled food rather than a source of nutrition.


I think that the major factor in why some cultures eat bugs (and enjoy them) and others don't is environmental and resource distress. One may decide whether an insect is a delicacy based on its flavor, the efforts required in raising or harvesting it, or any special properties attributed to eating the insect. Again, all of this is in contrast to the rest of what is provided in the natural environment.

Sunday, October 30, 2016

Which five quotes from the play prove that Macbeth subscribes to Aristotle's criteria for a tragic hero?

A tragic hero, in Aristotle's definition, must have five characteristics. I have provided a reference and a quote for each:


1. Flaw or error of judgment (hamartia)


In Act 5, scene 7, when Macbeth is confronted by Macduff and learns that the witches have deceived him by telling him 'none of human born shall harm Macbeth' and that Macduff had been from his 'mother's womb untimely ripped,' he acknowledges that he had made a mistake by saying:



Accursed be that tongue that tells me so,
For it hath cow'd my better part of man!



2. A reversal of fortune (peripeteia) brought about because of the hero's error in judgment.


In Act 5, scene 3, Macbeth realises that he is almost at his end. He is distraught and expresses this in a short monologue:



...I am sick at heart,
When I behold—Seyton, I say!—This push
Will cheer me ever, or disseat me now.
I have lived long enough: my way of life
Is fall'n into the sear, the yellow leaf;...



3. The discovery or recognition that the reversal was brought about by the hero's own actions (anagnorisis)


Macbeth realises, also in Act 5, scene 3, in the same monologue, that he cannot rely on anyone and that he is despised because of what he has done:



...As honour, love, obedience, troops of friends,
I must not look to have; but, in their stead,
Curses, not loud but deep, mouth-honour, breath,
Which the poor heart would fain deny, and dare not...



4.  Excessive Pride (hubris)


In Act 4, scene 1, after the witches have predicted that Macbeth shall only be vanquished if Birnam Wood marches up Dunsinane hill, and that no man of woman born shall harm him, he feels invincible and is proud of the fact. He announces:



...Sweet bodements! good!
Rebellion's head, rise never till the wood
Of Birnam rise, and our high-placed Macbeth
Shall live the lease of nature, pay his breath
To time and mortal custom...



5. The character's fate must be greater than deserved.


In the end, Macbeth dies an ignominious death and is beheaded by Macduff. His head is placed on a spike to be displayed. He is treated like a common criminal and there is no honour in his death. One would expect that a man of his stature would actually have deserved some respect, but because of his overwhelming malice, none is given.


In the final scene, this contempt for Macbeth is clearly displayed when Macduff greets Malcolm:



Hail, king! for so thou art: behold, where stands
The usurper's cursed head: the time is free:...


What are Jonas's character traits from The Giver?

Jonas is the protagonist of The Giver and is chosen by the elders to become the Receiver of Memory. This means that he will be asked to bear all of the pain and suffering of all the world, past and present, in order for his community to live in peace and ignorant happiness. When Jonas is selected for this position in the community, during the Ceremony of Twelve, the Chief Elder explains that Jonas has all of the character traits needed in order to accomplish such a daunting task for the rest of his life. In chapter 8, the whole community and Jonas are told that he has intelligence, integrity, courage, wisdom, and the capacity to see beyond. (The capacity to see beyond actually means that he can sometimes see color, but he doesn't realize that completely until after the Giver explains it to him later on.) The Chief Elder does not truly understand the last two character traits because those actually come to Receivers as they receive memories that hold these mysteries. Jonas is scared to assumed such a mysterious assignment, but he says he will do it anyway--showing his courage. 

What were some agricultural differences between the lower and upper south?

The biggest agricultural difference between the Upper and the Lower South was that the states of the Lower South were heavily engaged in the production of cotton as a cash crop. Especially in the so-called "Black Belt" that ran through upcountry Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi, some areas in the Lower South were essentially monocultural, producing cotton for a growing international market. States in the Upper South, especially Virginia, Maryland, and Kentucky, also cultivated cash crops, especially tobacco, but overall the agricultural economy was more diverse. As early as the eighteenth century, many farmers and planters in the region were growing wheat, corn, and hemp among other crops. One effect of this was that the Upper South, having an excess of slave labor (many of these crops were not as labor-intensive as cotton and other cash crops) sold enslaved people to planters in the Deep South. The internal slave trade that developed witnessed over one million people sold to planters in the Lower South. Many (perhaps most) of these people saw their families torn apart, never to be reunited. As a result, slavery, or at least slave labor, became less important to the Upper South.

What is the problem with the morality of the Puritans' beliefs in Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown"?

The problem with the Puritans' morality in this story is that they are total hypocrites.  The Devil says to young Goodman Brown, "'I have been as well acquainted with your family as with every a one among the Puritans; and that's no trifle to say.'"  He claims that he helped Brown's grandfather whip a Quaker woman in the street, and that he gave Brown's father a bit of fire with which to set fire to an Indian village.  Moreover, the Devil says that he is just as well acquainted with all the other Puritans as he was with Brown's forebears.  Thus, even though they always seemed pious and God-fearing to Brown, it is now made clear that they only appeared that way but were actually sinful and vicious.


Further, on the path in the woods, Brown sees the Devil speak with Goody Cloyse, the pious old woman who'd taught him catechism.  It turns out that she's good friends with the Devil.  He later sees the deacon and the minister, and they know the Devil well too.  Then, when Brown gets to the witches' Sabbath, he sees infamous sinners sitting with those people known in Salem for their "especial sanctity."  Therefore, the problem with the Puritans' morality is that none of them are, in fact, truly moral.  They all pretend to be righteous and pious, but it turns out that all these people who seem to be so good are really terrible sinners who delight in their sinfulness.

Saturday, October 29, 2016

Why was Juliek concerned about his violin after the forced march from Buna?

When the Polish musician Juliek, who worked in the electrical warehouse at Buna, speaks to Elie among the crush of men who have come to the barracks at Gleiwitz, he is fearful that his violin will get broken in the chaos. He has brought it with him on the deadly forced march from Buna. Elie is shocked that Juliek is worried about a violin:



I thought he had gone out of his mind. What use was a violin here?



Later, after fighting for air and his life in the claustrophobic pile of dead and dying men, Elie hears a violin. It was Juliek playing a fragment from a Beethoven concerto. Elie realizes why Juliek has brought his violin. It is his last connection with life and civilization. Instead of being reduced to a wild savage fighting for a morsel of bread, Juliek plays the violin, proving his worth as a man and an artist:



He was playing his life. The whole of his life was gliding on the strings—his lost hopes, his charred past, his extinguished future. He played as he would never play again.



Juliek refuses to go out as a victim. He is, instead, a rebel. Playing the Beethoven concerto was his last attempt at rebellion against his bitter fate. The Germans had prohibited the Jews from playing compositions from German composers. Juliek thumbs his nose at this restriction and in the last moments of his life. When Elie wakes up the next morning, Juliek is dead and his violin crushed.

Friday, October 28, 2016

What is the percent by mass of NaHCO3 in a solution containing 20 g NaHCO3 dissolved in 600 g water?

The solute of the solution is the substance that is dissolved (`~NaHCO_3` )


The solvent of the solution is the substance that the solute was dissolved in (`~H_2O` )


The solution is the solute and the solvent together.


To calculate the percent of something, you divide the "part" (the solute) by the "whole" (solution).


From the question, we know the following:


  • The mass of the solute = 20 g `~NaHCO_3`

  • The mass of the solvent = 600 g `~H_2O`

In order to get the mass of the solution, we must add the mass of the solute to the mass of the solvent:


   mass of solution = mass of solute + mass of solvent


                           = 20 g + 600 g 


                           = 620 g `~NaHCO_3` solution


The formula used to calculate percent by mass is:


   % by mass = [mass of solute/mass of solution] x 100


                    = [20 g/620 g] x 100  


                    = 3.2 %

Thursday, October 27, 2016

How has Macbeth's character developed from Act 2, Scene 2, to the Banquet Scene?

In the second scene of Act II, Macbeth has just murdered King Duncan. While Lady Macbeth seems calm, he starts. He thinks he hears someone cry out, or he simply hears men talking in their sleep. Macbeth is terrified of his act:



“I am afraid to think what I have done; / Look on't again I dare not.”



Even though he was reluctant to commit this crime, Macbeth feigns shock at the discovery of Duncan’s body. Moreover, he kills the guards whom he framed for the murder. He becomes increasingly paranoid and dissatisfied, worrying about his uncertain position as king: “We have scotch'd the snake, not kill'd it.” Macbeth thinks it necessary to kill his friend Banquo and Banquo’s son Fleance because the witches predicted that Banquo’s “children shall be kings.” He also becomes increasingly manipulative, convincing two men to murder Banquo and Fleance. In addition, though he and Lady Macbeth had been so close, Macbeth plays things closer to his chest, telling her to “Be innocent of the knowledge” of how he will deal with Banquo.


During the banquet scene, Macbeth tries to put on a good face, but he is distracted by news of Banquo’s death and Fleance’s survival. He even condemns Banquo for not making it to the feast. However, the hallucinations that have plagued him since he thought he saw a dagger pointing the way towards Duncan explode in this scene. Macbeth is convinced that Banquo’s ghost has joined them, and his ravings nearly give him away. Eventually, Lady Macbeth needs to send everyone home. Between the second act and the end of the fourth act, Macbeth has committed more murders and has become more callous and unsettled.

What are natural treatments for food allergies and sensitivities?


Introduction

A food
allergy is an abnormal immune reaction caused by the
ingestion of a food or food additive. The most dramatic form of food allergy
reaction occurs within minutes, usually in response to certain foods such as
shellfish, peanuts, or strawberries. The effects are similar to those of a bee
sting allergy, involving hives, itching, swelling in the throat, and difficulty
breathing; this immediate type of allergic reaction can be life-threatening.


Other food allergy reactions are more delayed, causing relatively subtle symptoms over days or weeks. These symptoms include gastrointestinal problems (constipation, diarrhea, gas, cramping, and bloating), rashes, and headaches. However, because such delayed reactions are relatively vague and can have other causes, they have remained a controversial subject in medicine.


Some reactions that are similar to those from food allergies, but do not actually involve the immune system, are termed “food sensitivities” (or “food intolerance”). In most cases, the cause of such sensitivities is unknown.


Delayed-type food allergies and sensitivities might play a role in many diseases, including asthma, attention deficit disorder, rheumatoid arthritis, vaginal yeast infection, canker sores, colic, ear infection, eczema, irritable bowel syndrome, migraine headache, psoriasis, chronic sinus infection, ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease, and celiac disease. However, not all experts agree; practitioners of natural medicine tend to be more enthusiastic about the food allergy theory of disease than conventional practitioners.


Conventional treatment for immediate-type food allergy reactions includes
desensitization (allergy shots), emergency epinephrine
(adrenaline) kits for self-injection, and the antihistamine diphenhydramine
(Benadryl). Delayed-type food allergies are much more difficult to identify and
treat. Although skin and blood tests are sometimes used, their reliability is
questionable. A particular blood test called ALCAT has shown some promise, but
much more study is necessary to establish its accuracy.


The double-blind food challenge is the only truly reliable way to identify delayed-type food allergies. This method uses some means of disguising the possibly allergenic food, usually by mixing it with other, nonallergenic foods. Persons are randomly given either the possibly allergenic food or placebo on a number of occasions separated by one or more days. Neither the physician nor the participant knows what food is truly allergenic and what is not. Evaluation of the response can then determine whether an allergic response is present. Studies suggest that perhaps only one-third of people who believe they are allergic to a given food actually experience an allergic reaction when they are given it in a double-blind fashion; in addition, reactions are often milder than persons believe.


Although it is the most accurate way of determining food allergies, the double-blind food challenge is still mostly used in research. The elimination diet with food challenges is the most common technique in use.


Another conventional approach for delayed-type food allergies is oral cromolyn (a drug sometimes used in an inhaled form for treating asthma and other allergic illnesses). A double-blind, placebo-controlled study of fourteen children with milk and other food allergies found that cromolyn was effective in preventing allergic reactions in eleven of thirteen cases, whereas placebo was effective in only three of nine cases. In another study, thirty-two persons were given cromolyn one-half hour before meals and at bedtime. If their food allergy symptoms were prevented, the participants were entered into a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study using cromoglycate. Of the thirty-one people who completed the study, twenty-four experienced relief of gastrointestinal symptoms when taking cromolyn compared with two when taking placebo. In addition, systemic allergic reactions were blocked with the cromolyn. The drug also had many side effects.







Principal Proposed Natural Treatments

There are no well-documented natural treatments for food allergies. The most obvious approach would be to remove known allergenic foods from the diet. Some alternative practitioners offer laboratory tests to identify such allergens. However, no lab tests have been proven accurate for this purpose.


The elimination diet is another approach for identifying allergenic foods. This method involves starting with a highly restricted diet consisting only of foods that are seldom allergenic, such as rice, yams, and turkey. If dietary restriction leads to resolution or improvement of symptoms, foods are then reintroduced one by one to see which, if any, will trigger reactions. There is some evidence that the elimination diet may be effective for chronic or recurrent hives; it has been tried for many other conditions too, including irritable bowel syndrome, asthma, chronic ear infections, reflux esophagitis, and Crohn’s disease.


Still another method involves simply eliminating the most common allergens. Cow’s milk protein intolerance is thought to be the most common childhood allergy, followed by allergies to eggs, peanuts, nuts, and fish. Some evidence indicates that the use of special hypoallergenic infant formulas rather than cow’s milk formula may help prevent eczema, urticaria, and food-induced digestive distress. In addition, eliminating cow’s milk from the diets of breast-feeding infants and their nursing mothers might reduce symptoms of infantile colic, although not all studies have found benefit.


In hopes of preventing food allergies and diseases related to them, some experts recommend that pregnant women and women who are breast-feeding (and their children) should avoid allergenic foods. However, it is not clear if this method actually provides any benefit. For example, one study evaluated 165 children at high risk of developing allergic symptoms. Careful avoidance of allergenic foods in the diets of the mothers and infants did not reduce the later development of eczema, asthma, hay fever, or food allergy symptoms.




Other Proposed Treatments

Digestive enzymes such as bromelain and other proteolytic enzymes
have been proposed as a treatment for food allergies, based on the reasonable idea
that digesting offending proteins will reduce allergic reactions to them. However,
there is no real evidence that they are effective against food allergies.


Thymus extract is a supplement derived from the thymus gland of cows. Preliminary evidence suggests that by normalizing immune function, thymus extracts may be helpful for food allergies. However, there are significant safety issues, and this study did not prove the supplement to be effective.



Probiotics (such as Lactobacillus species)
are friendly bacteria that have been studied for their ability to prevent or treat
respiratory allergies and various gastrointestinal symptoms, most notably
diarrhea. However, at least one study found that probiotics were not helpful in
treating cow’s milk allergy among infants.




Bibliography


Arvola, T., and D. Holmberg-Marttila. “Benefits and Risks of Elimination Diets.” Annals of Medicine 31 (1999): 293-298.



Bindslev-Jensen, C., et al. “Food Allergy and Food Intolerance: What Is the Difference?” Annals of Allergy 72 (1994): 317-320.



Carroccio, A., et al. “Evidence of Very Delayed Clinical Reactions to Cow’s Milk in Cow’s Milk-Intolerant Patients.” Allergy 55 (2000): 574-579.



Dainese, R., et al. “Discrepancies Between Reported Food Intolerance and Sensitization Test Findings in Irritable Bowel Syndrome Patients.” American Journal of Gastroenterology 94 (1999): 1892-1897.



Drisko, J., et al. “Treating Irritable Bowel Syndrome with a Food Elimination Diet Followed by Food Challenge and Probiotics.” Journal of the American College of Nutrition 25 (2006): 514-522.



Geha, R. S., et al. “Multicenter, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Multiple-Challenge Evaluation of Reported Reactions to Monosodium Glutamate.” Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 106 (2000): 973-980.



Hill, D. J., et al. “Role of Food Protein Intolerance in Infants with Persistent Distress Attributed to Reflux Esophagitis.” Journal of Pediatrics 136 (2000): 641-647.



Hol, J., et al. “The Acquisition of Tolerance Toward Cow’s Milk Through Probiotic Supplementation.” Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 121, no. 6 (2008): 1448-1454.



Kim, T. E., et al. “Comparison of Skin Prick Test Results Between Crude Allergen Extracts from Foods and Commercial Allergen Extracts in Atopic Dermatitis by Double-Blind Placebo-Controlled Food Challenge for Milk, Egg, and Soybean.” Yonsei Medical Journal 43 (2002): 613-620.



Metcalfe, D. D. “Food Allergy.” Primary Care 25 (1998): 819-829.



Niggemann, B., et al. “Prospective, Controlled, Multi-center Study on the Effect of an Amino-Acid-Based Formula in Infants with Cow’s Milk Allergy/Intolerance and Atopic Dermatitis.” Pediatric Allergy and Immunology 12 (2001): 78-82.



Rodriguez, J., et al. “Randomized, Double-Blind, Crossover Challenge Study in Fifty-Three Subjects Reporting Adverse Reactions to Melon (Cucumis melo).” Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 106 (2000): 968-972.



Zeiger, R. S. “Dietary Aspects of Food Allergy Prevention in Infants and Children.” Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition 30, suppl. (2000): S77-S86.

In Brave New World, why do the women whip Linda?

The women whip Linda so she will stay away from “their men.” 


Linda is from the main community, but she is living on the Reservation with the “savages.”  She hates it there.  She doesn’t understand them, and they do not understand her—especially the women. 


Linda is attacked by a group of “savage” women for sleeping around. 



Linda was on the bed. One of the women was holding her wrists. Another was lying across her legs, so that she couldn't kick. The third was hitting her with a whip. Once, twice, three times; and each time Linda screamed. (Ch. 8)



When John, Linda’s son, asks her why they are whipping her, she says she doesn’t know.  She doesn’t understand why the women would be upset that she was sleeping with their mates.



"I don't know. How should I know?" It was difficult to hear what she said, because she was lying on her stomach and her face was in the pillow. "They say those men are their men," she went on … (Ch. 8)



For Linda, sleeping with multiple people was a fact of life.  It was in fact expected in her society, and if you didn’t do it you were considered odd.  The concept of monogamy is not only unheard of but frowned upon.


When John calls Linda “mother,” she slaps him, saying, “I'm not your mother. I won't be your mother.”  She complains about being turned into a savage.  In the civilization Linda came from, “mother” is a foul word, considered obscene.  This is because everyone is born from a test tube.  Just as having one mate is unacceptable, having a child the natural way is considered immoral.


Linda ended up on the reservation when Tomakin, The Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning, brought her there and left her because she was pregnant, which would be a great scandal back home.  Linda took precautions but still ended up with John, a situation she cannot tolerate.  This is why she both loves and hates John.  She has some motherly instincts, but he reminds her of everything she has lost.

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Why was Torvald so upset when he found out that Nora had borrowed money to save his life in A Doll's House by Ibsen?

Torvald's anger would be justified within the context of the social norms and expectations bestowed upon women at the time the play takes place, which is the 19th century. According to the standards of the time, Nora would have been expected to be an obedient, subservient wife who abides by all the rules of decorum and propriety expected of her. 


This being said, the loan that Nora makes, despite her good intentions,  breaks with every rule of spousal behavior that Nora would have been expected to follow in these ways:


  • Nora makes the loan agreement behind Torvald's back. Even Linde tells Nora that it is impossible for a woman to initiate a transaction of this nature without the consent (or signature) of a husband. That Nora breaks this major rule is something to be concerned about, either way.

  • Nora made this loan with Krogstad, who is a disgruntled employee of her husband's, and also an insubordinate.

  • Nora is blackmailed by Krogstad, and Torvald finds out that now they are at the mercy of the man.

  • Torvald realizes that his reputation as a man, as a supervisor, and as a husband will now be in peril. He will be looked upon as "weak," and as someone who cannot "control his home."

The problem is not that Torvald was angry at Nora; the issue here is that he gave more importance to his anger than to the fact that Nora had made so many sacrifices to save his life. 

Monday, October 24, 2016

Was the Afghanistan War a just war? How did the leaders justify it to their people and to the international community? What were the aims of this war?

First, we need to get a clear meaning of "Afghanistan War" and "just war."  I am going to assume you mean the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan in November 2001 after the attacks of 9/11.  By just war, you mean that the reason for going to war was just and the actions taken during that war were proportional to the attack of 9/11.  I will say "yes" to both counts.  The United States was attacked by a non-state actor in Al-Qaeda which was primarily headquartered in Afghanistan.  Afghanistan was a terrorist state that really had no stable government to speak of after the Soviet-led invasion weakened the government there and opened the door to anti-Western extremists taking over.  America wanted to wipe out the terror leaders Osama bin-Laden and his top lieutenants.  It was necessary to overthrow the government there as this government was aiding and abetting these leaders.  While some of the actions taken during the war have been controversial, such as drone strikes killing civilians, it is impossible to absolutely eliminate all risk to civilians in time of war. America has taken great pains by not turning the war into a war against the people but rather as a manhunt and an attempt at promoting a stable regime in the region so this does not happen again.  While its actions in the region make the Afghanistan War appear to be a long-term project, its actions have been justified by the attack on American soil.   

How accountable are the boys for their violent actions in the context of their situation on the island in William Golding's Lord of the Flies? How...

The above is actually a very complex question deserving a very complex answer. We must first take into consideration the fact that, in Lord of the Flies, William Golding chose to use children as characters, rather than adult men, for a reason. Children, who are still growing both mentally and physically, are much more vulnerable and more easily influenced than adults. Since they are so vulnerable and easily influenced, in Western courts, children are never held accountable, tried, and punished as adults. It can be said that Golding used children as characters to show just how easily human beings can be influenced to yield to our evil natures and also to show how little we are accountable for our evil actions.

The majority of the children are influenced to behave immorally by Jack, but even Jack is not without his influences. The novel is set during a war, and prior to the children's plane crash-landing on a deserted island, an atomic bomb had apparently wiped out all of England, as we learn when Piggy asks Ralph, "Didn't you hear what the pilot said? About the atom bomb? They're all dead" (Ch. 1). Golding wrote Lord of the Flies soon after serving in Great Britain's Royal Navy during World War II. Golding sets the novel during a major war, probably a world war, in order to show just how much war influences us to act upon our evil natures. He uses the boys' decay into wild, immoral behavior to show that all, even children, have good and evil natures, and our good natures can only be cultivated by civilization. In Golding's view, in the absence of civilization, such as during a war, mankind will naturally yield to its evil nature, just as millions became so easily influenced by and yielded to the Nazis, leading to the Holocaust.

In this sense, the only thing the children, even Jack, are truly guilty of is being deprived of civilization, leading to their moral depravity, which according to Golding, is a very natural consequence of being deprived of civilization. To punish such vulnerable children could be seen as yet a further fall from civilization. Just as the juvenile justice system does not punish children who commit crimes but rather, ideally speaking, strives to educate and mentor children into better behavior, it can be argued that the boys on the island also require the same education and mentoring, not necessarily punishment. Jack, above all, requires the most education and mentoring.

Hence, though we can, like Ralph and the rest of the boys, including Jack, weep "for the end of innocence, the darkness of man's heart, and the fall through the air of the true, wise friend called Piggy," it can be said we should not rally for the boys' punishment because such a call for revenge would only further yield to the "darkness of man's heart" (Ch. 12).

Sunday, October 23, 2016

In George Orwell's 1984, why would it be contradictory to Party doctrine if a Party member behaved?

In 1984, if a Party member behaves, it implies that this person has free will and therefore makes a rational and conscious decision to abide by the Party's rules. This is contradictory because it is this sense of free will which the Party seeks to destroy. This is explained by O'Brien in Part Three, Chapter Three, when he is talking with Winston in the Ministry of Love:



Ours is founded upon hatred. In our world there will be no emotions except fear, rage, triumph, and self-abasement. Everything else we shall destroy — everything. Already we are breaking down the habits of thought which have survived from before the Revolution.



As we see from this quote, the Party does not want people to have feelings, thoughts, or personal loyalties of their own. This is why the Party has developed Newspeak and why the Party governs so many aspects of life, like dating and marriage, and rewrites history to suit its political agenda. In contrast, the Party's power is based on the imposition of its worldview on others; the Party tells people what to think and what to feel and uses violence to eradicate free will. 


So, in Oceania, it is contradictory for a Party member to behave because conforming to the Party's rule should be second-nature, not a conscious choice. 

Saturday, October 22, 2016

What are some examples from the text of the boys being affected/changed because of the beast being on the island?

There are at least three beasts that are "on the island" in Lord of the Flies, and each has effects on the boys. The first, the "beast from water," is an imaginary beast that represents the boys' nameless fears. This beast affects the boys in at least two ways. First, the littluns consistently have nightmares and cry during the night. Considering that they have been separated from their homes and families and have endured a traumatic plane crash, this is not surprising. But rather than speaking about what is really bothering them, they imagine a beast. Ralph tries to address the issue and convince the boys their fears are groundless, but during the evening meeting the boys start to get spooked. Jack plays on their fears and leads them onto the beach in defiance of the rules. Ralph fears the boys have become "animals." 


The second beast is the "beast from air," a fallen paratrooper who lands on the island during the night. Samneric discover it, but are too panicked to investigate. They run frightened back to the other boys. Because this beast is on the mountain where the signal fire was, Ralph feels they are beaten and will never be rescued. However, Piggy uses surprising "intellectual daring" and suggests moving the signal fire to the beach. Simon, however, is determined to investigate the beast and climbs alone to the mountain and discovers the truth about it; he returns to the camp with the intention of letting the boys know the good news that the beast is nothing to fear, but they kill him before he can explain.


Finally, the third beast is the Lord of the Flies that Simon sees in his vision. This beast affects Simon by confirming to him that he was right about the beast--it is really "mankind's essential illness," the tendency toward evil that resides inside every person. Unfortunately Simon is unable to share his insights with the other boys; first they mock him when he suggests "maybe it's only us," and then, when he appears at the feast, they murder him, proving that they have succumbed to the very beast Simon tried to warn them about. 

Friday, October 21, 2016

How can a student write an essay about Sense and Sensibility?

The best way to begin the writing process for any essay is to ask questions about the topic. In this case, your topic is Sense and Sensibility, a wonderful book about the contrast and connection between reason and emotion. What questions came to your mind as you read the book? Here are some that came to mine.


  • Should Marianne have been more guarded around Willoughby?

  • Should Marianne have married Colonel Brandon?

  • How do Elinor and Marianne view relationships and marriage differently?

  • Are sense--a person's rational thoughts--and sensibility--a person's passions and emotions--necessarily opposed to one another?

  • Is Austen's view of marriage correct or flawed?

Make sure to choose a question that interests you, not someone else. This will help keep you motivated as you write. Once you determine this question, reread the novel (or at least some key chapters related to your question) and underline or highlight quotations related to your question.


After you do this, write a thesis: a single-sentence statement of your argument and your reasons for arguing this. Make sure that your thesis--while an opinion--is based on evidence from the book. Create an outline according to your teacher's format requirements, and then write the essay according to your outline.

What is the purpose of Ishiguro's novel The Remains of the Day, especially in relation to Stevens the butler?

The overarching purpose of Ishiguro's novel is to document and describe the decline of the traditional English lifestyle, and he pays particular attention to the rapid changes that took place within the country's traditional class structure during the first half of the Twentieth Century. Stevens is particularly important in the novel because he represents a key component of the old, upper class establishment: the butler. As a butler, Stevens' entire existence relies upon serving his master and the gentry as a whole. In the process of this service, Stevens neglects all of his personal desires, subordinating them to the demands of his job and the needs of the wealthy. By the end of the novel, however, the old upper class has begun to fade away while the middle class rises to prominence, and so it's suggested that Stevens' sacrifice has been unnecessary. All in all, the main point of the novel is to not only describe a changing English class structure, but to also chronicle how this monumental change affects the individuals, such as Stevens, who have given their lives to the established order.

Thursday, October 20, 2016

What two questions does the narrator ask the raven towards the end of "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe?

The speaker in "The Raven" asks the bird if there's anything that will ease his heartache, and if there's any chance he'll see his lost love in the afterlife.


Let's check out the details of these two questions:


1. In the fourth-to-last stanza, the speaker asks the raven:



Is there- is there balm in Gilead?



What he means is, "Is there anything that will comfort my soul?" We know that the speaker is in a deep depression brought on by grief over the death of his love, Lenore, so by asking if there's balm in Gilead, he's asking if there's anything that will soothe his pain or offer relief from his profound sadness.


You'll notice that this is not a very specific question. (It's a reference to the Bible, in the book of Jeremiah, when someone originally spoke that question when demanding to know why the "daughter of his people" hadn't yet been healed.)


2. In the third-to-last stanza, the speaker gets more specific and asks the bird if there's a chance that he can see his beloved Lenore in the afterlife. In other words, he's asking if it's true that his soul and the soul of Lenore will once again be joined after death.


I suppose if you want to be very picky, you could say the speaker doesn't really ask a question but instead makes a demand for information in the form of "Tell me..."


Anyway, here's how he requests this final piece of information:



Tell this soul with sorrow laden if, within the distant Aidenn,


It shall clasp a sainted maiden whom the angels name Lenore- 



Of course, the bird's answer is "no" ("nevermore") and it upsets the speaker so much that he yells and tries to get the bird to leave, but it won't.

In 1973, Rosenhan performed a study in which eight healthy adults were admitted to a psychiatric hospital. What did this study demonstrate?

During the Rosenhan experiment, eight healthy people checked themselves into mental hospitals and studied the conditions therein; below is a link to the actual study. Probably the most important finding of the study was that not a single one of the healthy adults was identified as such. Most of them were diagnosed with schizophrenia. This finding is interesting because it makes clear the possibility that there are no good ways in psychiatry for differentiating between someone who is healthy and someone who is mentally ill. 


A secondary finding was how mental health staff separated themselves from the patients; the higher the rank of a staff person, the less time that person spent with the patients. Psychiatrists spent the least amount of time and the attendants the most. Attendants spent as little time as they were allowed on the ward, preferring to stay behind the glass "cage" that separated staff from patients. 


Mental health is challenging to define, as Rosenhan's study demonstrates. Given the fact that a psychiatric diagnosis can be a stigma in a person's life, the fact that psychiatry cannot identify mentally healthy people means that there are people who have experienced the dehumanizing effects of the mental institution, the stigma of diagnosis, and the side effects of psychotropic drugs and who are not significantly ill, after all.  

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

How does Anatomy of Melancholy fit into the history of this genre of literature? Is there a name for it, and could you help point me to other...

This is a great question! The work itself is one I would characterize as a hybrid of philosophy and psychology. I think what you are finding appealing here is that it was written long before both philosophy and psychology became narrowly specialized academic disciplines and it tries to grapple with the big problems of how we are to live our lives in a holistic fashion. The book distills not just vast learning but also wisdom about human nature and emotions. From the other books you have listed, I think there are some other writers I could suggest for you. I also think that you might enjoy pursuing a degree in history of philosophy or religious studies -- most professors in those fields would be delighted to have you as a student.


The starting point for your reading should really be antiquity, as the writers you enjoy were saturated in classical culture. First, Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics is the starting point for much subsequent ethical thought. Epicurus' Enchiridion is short and readable and is a good starting point for thinking about how one is responsible for one's own emotions. I suspect you would also enjoy the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius (another Stoic) and Boethius' Consolations of Philosophy (written as he was in prison, had been tortured, and was about to be executed). 


As you move towards the present, the works become more technical, and often take as a starting point the question of how we can know things or make ethical judgments. Some interesting ones for you (in roughly chronological order) might be:


  • John Locke's An Essay Concerning Human Understanding underlies much of Enlightenment thought. 

  • David Hume's An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding takes Locke's skepticism even further; Hume really struggles with how we can have ethical beliefs in face of epistemological uncertainty.

  • Edmund Burke is somewhat similar to the philosophers you enjoy. Two major books are: A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful and Reflections on the Revolution in France.


  • Immanuel Kant is a towering figure in philosophical thought. His Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals is brilliant but difficult reading (he is extremely precise in language and thought -- but his writing is so dense that it may take an hour to get through five or ten pages, in my experience). He is especially important in the way he addresses the concept of moral duty.

  • Matthew Arnold is quite similar to Emerson in being an essayist who addresses philosophical and artistic issues together. Culture and Anarchy and Hebraism and Hellenism are two essays of his you might enjoy. 

  • Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche is also a fascinating author who has the same reflective breadth as the others you enjoy. Three of his major works are: Thus Spoke Zarathustra, Beyond Good and Evil, and On the Genealogy of Morality (1887)

  • Bertrand Russell wrote many works of popular philosophy in a quite readable style.

  • Richard Weaver is a deeply conservative and religious author who also is enormously erudite and deals with broad moral issues. Two of his most important works are: Ideas Have Consequences and Language is Sermonic.

  • On a more liberal side, Nussbaum's The Fragility of Goodness also addresses the question of how to live a moral life.

In The Merchant Of Venice by Shakespeare, what are some malapropisms in Old Gobbo’s comments?

A malapropism is defined as the erroneous use of a word in place of a similar sounding one. The result is often humorous or ironic. A good example is: 'The missionary was eaten by cannonballs,' when the actual word should be cannibals.


In Act 2, scene 2, the repartee between Gobbo and his son's future master, Bassanio, produces a few malapropisms from the old man. Gobbo tells Bassanio in line 133 that:



He hath a great infection, sir, as one would say, to serve--



An infection refers to an attack by a virus or bacteria which brings about illness or disease. What Gobbo actually wants to say is affection, which means desire. He wants to say that Launcelot is keen to work for Bassanio.


When Launcelot later confirms his desire to serve Bassanio in line 151, Gobbo emphasizes the fact by saying in line 152:



That is the very defect of the matter, sir.



A defect is a shortcoming and this is certainly not what Gobbo means. He actually wants to say effect in order to stress the importance of his son's request.


It is obvious that Gobbo is not well educated and he strives to make a good impression on behalf of his son by attempting to sound intelligent but he, unfortunately, puts his foot into it. Launcelot seems to have inherited the same habit and also uses a few malapropisms. 


In line 29 he, for example, says:



...Certainly the Jew is the very devil
incarnal;



He actually means incarnate and is stating that Shylock is the devil himself - an incarnation of the devil. Further on he uses another wrong word when he says in line 39:



 I hope, an old man, shall frutify unto you



Launcelot actually meant to say certify i.e. that his father will vouch for his expertise and goodness as a servant and as a person. He later also says the following:



In very brief, the suit is impertinent to myself



He is actually trying to say that the request is pertinent to him, in other words, that it applies to him. Impertinent means rude and disrespectful or not relevant which is, obviously, not what he means.


It is clear that the apple does not fall far from the tree in this instance. In the end, though, Launcelot is employed by Bassanio and later accompanies him to Belmont where the beautiful and wealthy heiress, Portia, resides.

What is the plot diagram of "The Tell-Tale Heart" by Edgar Allan Poe?

The rising action of this story consists of the vast majority of the text.  It includes the narrator's introduction, his account of the old man, his motivation for and intention to kill the old man, as well as all of the repetitive and minute descriptions of how he crept into the old man's room so slowly each night at the same time.  It even includes his murder of the old man and the disposal of the body via dismemberment and burial beneath the floorboards.  The climax (or the apex of Freitag's triangle) is when the police have arrived and the narrator begins to feel terrible anxiety and believes that he hears the old man's heart beating beneath the floor (despite the fact that he's dead).  At this point, either the narrator is having a total nervous breakdown or the old man is somehow, supernaturally, undead (spoiler: it's the former), and it is the moment of greatest tension in the story.  The falling action and the resolution of the story include the narrator admitting to the police that he murdered the old man.

Why does the sniper decide to risk taking a look at the corpse of the enemy sniper?

The Republican sniper may have had an idea that the Free State sniper would be someone he recognized. Many of the men who fought in the Irish Civil War had served together in the Irish Republican Army which had waged war against the British, gaining independence in 1921. A dispute arose between factions of the IRA and in 1922, they split. The protagonist sniper in Liam O'Flaherty's short story remained loyal to the Republican army and believed that Ireland should have full autonomy, while the Free State soldiers, including the antagonist sniper, were in agreement with the Anglo-Irish Treaty which made Ireland part of the British Commonwealth. O'Flaherty suggests that the two snipers may have served together and the Republican sniper is curious because his enemy had been a good shot:



He decided he was a good shot, whoever he was. He wondered did he know him. Perhaps he had been in his own company before the split in the army. He decided to risk going over to have a look at him.



Of course, he did know the enemy, who turned out to be his brother. Apparently, as in any family, the politics of the two brothers turned out to be quite different. The fact that it was his brother may not have been that surprising to the Republican sniper as he was probably well aware of his own brother's marksmanship.

What was Janie Crawford's effect on others in Their Eyes Were Watching God?

Janie Crawford drives women crazy with envy and men crazy with lust. Chapter one shows Janie walking through Eatonville to get to her house, and the way the townspeople respond to her proves the effect she has on most everyone with whom she comes in contact. First, the men notice her aesthetically attractive and tempting physical features along with her long flowing hair and the following:



"They, the men, were saving with the mind what they lost with the eye" (2).



This means that what they saw walking before them was saved in their brains for later and clearly proves that they were smitten with lust. The women, on the other hand, don't have much good to say about Janie generally, but they are even more judgmental when she doesn't stop to talk with them about where she has been for a year and a half. The women are described as follows:



"The women took the faded shirt and muddy overalls and laid them away for remembrance. It was a weapon against her strength and it turned out of no significance, still it was a hope that she might fall to their level some day" (2).



Janie used to wear the finest dresses when they knew her as Mrs. Starks; but after leaving Joe for Tea Cake, they are surprised to see her in overalls, dirty, and her hair flowing down her back. To these women's remembrance, Joe Starks had forced Janie to wear a wrap around her head in the store because of the effect she had on him and customers like Walter:



"And one night he had caught Walter standing behind Janie and brushing the back of his hand back and forth across the loose end of her braid ever so lightly so as to enjoy the feel of it without Janie knowing what he was doing. . . He felt like rushing forth with the meat knife and chopping off the offending hand" (55).  



Here we see that Janie affects Walter to the point of him not being able to resist touching a married woman's hair. Then, she affects her husband to the point that he covets her, feels he owns her, and is even tempted to kill in order to maintain control over her as well as the men who look upon her.

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Why does Willy both defend and criticize Biff in Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller?

The love/hate relationship between Willy and Biff stems from three events that changed the perception that the men had of one another:


  1. uncovering who each of them really is

  2. ending their sham dynamics and

  3. realizing the difference between their fantasies versus their reality.

Willy saw in Biff both his future dreams and his shattered dreams. Biff was the source of Willy's hopes and possibilities. When Biff was no longer Willy's symbol of success, Willy's former admiration transformed into rejection. All is further complicated by the fact that, regardless of it all, they are still father and son.


How it all began


From the very beginning of the play Death of a Salesman, the audience can perceive that there is an inner conflict between the character of Willy Loman and both of his children. This becomes evident when Biff tells his brother Happy about his father, Willy:



"Everything I say there's a twist of mockery on his face. I can't get near him."



The problem between Willy and Biff started when the latter was 17. Willy adored Biff, who had grown up to become  a good-looking, tall, athletic, and witty teenager. Willy relished basking in the light of his very popular son, who represented everything that Willy believed in. He saw in Biff someone who, at a very early age, had accomplished the earmarks of the American Dream, according to Willy. 


Biff was


  • well-liked

  • popular

  • admired

  • handsome

  • successful

Willy loved so much to vicariously mesh himself into Biff's persona that he transferred all of his views of life, and of himself, onto his son: In Willy's eyes, Biff was basically a better, perfected, much more successful version of himself.


In turn, Biff loved and admired his father; at least, he admired the version of his father that Willy presented to him--someone who is also well-liked and very successful.


However, all of this imagery and mutual admiration was over once Biff discovered that Willy cheated on Linda, Biff's mother. His view of his father, and the persona of the fatherly hero that Biff once held so true, shattered him enormously. As such, he refused to continue being a part of the dyad that once were Willy and Biff. Biff goes away, leads an unsuccessful and unfulfilling life, and becomes everything that Willy feared and dreaded.


As such, Willy now sees Biff as a defector, or a traitor, of what could have been a great alliance. Biff is a failure of the American Dream. He is no different than Willy--the difference is that Willy insists on living in a fantasy world.


Willy has an unhealthy type of fixation with success; one which is entirely shallow and superficial. Hence, rather than exploring ways to mend the relationship with Biff and see how his son could be happier, he rejects Biff's lifestyle and takes it as a direct attack on his own dreams.

Is there friction on Mars?

Yes, there is friction on Mars, and it functions the same way that it does on Earth, but the values are likely to be different on a case-by-case basis.


Friction is basically the result of matter interacting with other matter and causing both bodies to alter their momentum. Fundamentally, this is due to the electrons on the outside of atoms coming into close proximity to each other, and repelling each other proportionally to that proximity. At a slightly larger scale, it can also be due to imperfections in a surface that provide relatively jagged edges that another surface would catch on, deflecting its motion. In simple terms, as long as there's something for an object to bump into, there will be friction.


Mars definitely has a surface, and it also has an atmosphere, albeit a thin one, so there's definitely friction from both the surface and the air. However, the density of the air is much lower than the Earth's, so the air friction is lower. Likewise, Mars' gravity is about a third of Earth's, so the force with which any objects on the surface would be "squeezed" against each other is much lower, meaning that there would be less friction there too.

In Macbeth, what are the three reasons for his reluctance to kill Duncan?

Macbeth is reluctant to kill King Duncan for a number of reasons.  First, he is Duncan's relative and his subject.  Macbeth's duty is to love and defend his kinsman and his king.  Next, he is Duncan's host, who should, he says, "against [Duncan's] murderer shut the door" and not carry the murder weapon himself (1.7.15).  Next, he says, Duncan is an incredibly good person and king; he has been a humble leader, so untainted by any kind of corruption, that the loss all of his great virtues will be too upsetting to everyone in the kingdom and the tears of Duncan's subjects will flow too much. 


Earlier in this same soliloquy, Macbeth also mentions the idea that there will be terrible consequences for himself and his soul if he commits this awful act.  He wishes that it were possible to simply commit the murder and not have to deal with any such consequences.  Further, he fears that if he kills the king and proves that such a thing can be done, others could come and do the same thing to him.

How do people cope with chronic illness?


Introduction

In modern times, chronic illnesses are becoming increasingly common. In the twenty-first century, the leading causes of death in the United States are chronic diseases, as opposed to the beginning of the previous century, when infectious diseases were more rampant. Chronic illnesses are diseases that are long in duration, have multiple risk factors, have a long latency period, are usually noncontagious, cause greater and progressive functional impairment, and are generally incurable. Examples of common chronic illnesses include heart diseases (such as coronary heart disease and hypertension), cancers (malignant neoplasms), chronic obstructive lung diseases (bronchial asthma, emphysema, and chronic bronchitis), cerebrovascular diseases (stroke), diabetes mellitus, kidney diseases (end-stage renal disease and renal failure), musculoskeletal disorders (rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis), chronic mental illnesses, neurological disorders (epilepsy, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and multiple sclerosis), and some of the results of accidents or injuries (traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury, amputations, and burns). Dealing with these illnesses presents numerous challenges for patients and their family members and care providers. “Coping” is a term that is usually used to describe the process by which people manage demands in excess of the resources that are at their disposal. Therefore, in addition to medical treatment, management of chronic illnesses must address lifelong coping with these illnesses.














The interest in coping with chronic illnesses can be traced back to late 1960s, with the work of American physician Thomas Holmes and Richard Rahe, then a medical student, at the University of Washington. They constructed the Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS) to assess the amount of stress to which an individual is exposed. Personal injuries or illnesses were rated as the sixth-most-important events in terms of their intensity in affecting one’s life and increasing the chances of further illness in the subsequent year of life.




Models of Coping

American psychologist Franklin Shontz, in his book The Psychological Aspects of Physical Illness and Disability (1975), described the phases of reaction to any illness. The first stage on being diagnosed with a chronic illness is what he described as the stage of shock, in which the person is in a bewildered state and behaves in an automatic fashion with a sense of detachment from all surroundings. In this stage, patients often describe themselves as observers rather than participants in what is happening around them. The second stage is the stage of encounter or reaction. In this stage, the person is feeling a sense of loss and has disorganized thinking. Emotions of grief, despair, and helplessness are common. In this stage, patients often describe the feeling of being overwhelmed by reality. The third stage is what Shontz calls retreat. In this stage, the feeling of denial becomes very strong, but this state cannot persist and the patient gradually begins to accept reality as the symptoms persist and functional impairments ensue.


In the 1980s, American psychologist Richard Lazarus, an emeritus professor at the University of California at Berkeley, proposed the famous coping model called the transactional model. This model has also been applied widely in understanding coping with chronic illnesses. According to the transactional model, all stressful experiences, including chronic illnesses, are perceived as person-environment transactions. In these transactions, the person undergoes a four-stage assessment known as appraisal. When confronted with a diagnosis of chronic illness, the first stage is the primary appraisal of the event. In this stage, the patient internally determines the severity of the illness and whether he or she is in trouble. If the illness is perceived to be severe or threatening, has caused harm or loss in the past, or has affected someone known to the person, then the stage of secondary appraisal occurs. If, on the other hand, the illness is judged to be irrelevant or poses minimal threat, then stress does not develop and no further coping occurs. The secondary appraisal determines how much control one has over the illness. Based on this understanding, the individual ascertains what means of control are available. This is the stage known as coping. Finally, the fourth stage is the stage of reappraisal, in which the person determines whether the effects of illness have been negated.


According to the transactional model, there are two broad categories of coping. The first one is called problem-focused coping, and the second one is called emotion-focused coping. Problem-focused coping is based on one’s capability to think about and alter the environmental event or situation. Examples of this strategy at the thought-process level include utilization of problem-solving skills, interpersonal conflict resolution, advice seeking, time management, goal setting, and gathering more information about what is causing one stress. Problem solving requires thinking through various solutions, evaluating the pros and cons of different solutions, and then implementing a solution that seems most advantageous to reduce the stress. Examples of this strategy at the behavioral or action level include activities such as joining a smoking-cessation program, complying with a prescribed medical treatment, adhering to a diabetic diet plan, or scheduling and prioritizing tasks for managing time.


In the emotion-focused strategy, the focus is inward and on altering the way one thinks or feels about a situation or an event. Examples of this strategy at the thought-process level include denying the existence of the stressful situation, freely expressing emotions, avoiding the stressful situation, making social comparisons, or minimizing (looking at the bright side of things). Examples of this strategy at the behavioral or action level include seeking social support to negate the influence of the stressful situation; using exercise, relaxation, or meditation; joining support groups; practicing religious rituals; and escaping through the use of alcohol and drugs.




Crisis Theory of Coping

In the 1980s, American psychologist Rudolf Moos proposed the crisis theory to describe the factors that influence the crises of illnesses. He identified three types of factors that influence the coping process in illness. The first category of factors comprises the illness-related factors. The more severe the disease in terms of its threat, the harder is the coping. Examples of such severe threats include conditions such as burns that are likely to produce facial disfigurement, implantation of devices for excreting fecal or urinary wastes, or epileptic seizures. The second category of factors comprises background and personal factors. These factors include one’s age, gender, social class, religious values, emotional maturity, and self-esteem. For example, men are often affected more if the illness threatens their ambition, vigor, or physical power, while children show greater resilience because of their relative naïveté and limited cognitive abilities. The third category of factors identified by Moos comprises physical and social environmental factors. Generally speaking, people who have more social support tend to cope better when compared to people who live alone and do not have many friends.


Moos proposed in his crisis theory that these three factors impinge on the coping process. The coping process begins with cognitive appraisal, in which the patient reflects on the meaning of the illness in his or her life. This leads to formulating a set of adaptive tasks. Moos identified three adaptive tasks for coping directly with the illness: dealing with the symptoms and functional impairment associated with the illness or injury, adjusting to the hospital environment or medical procedures, and developing relationships with care providers. He further identified four adaptive tasks as crucial for adapting to general psychosocial functioning: maintaining a sense of emotional balance and controlling negative affect; preserving a sense of mastery, competence, or self-image; sustaining meaningful relationships with friends and family; and preparing for a future of uncertainty. The family members or long-term care providers who work with such patients also undergo these seven adaptive processes and must make these adjustments for effective coping. These adaptive tasks usually result in specific coping strategies. Moos described the following coping strategies: denial, or minimizing the seriousness of the illness (which is sometimes helpful, especially in the earlier stages); seeking information; learning medical procedures (which is sometimes helpful for self-care, such as taking insulin shots); mastering adaptive tasks; recruiting family support; thinking about and discussing the future to decipher greater predictability; and finding a purpose in and positive impacts of the illness on one’s life.




Heart Diseases

Heart diseases or cardiovascular diseases have been the leading cause of death in the United States since the 1980s. Initial research on coping with heart disease was done on patients with myocardial infarction, or heart attack. The research focused mainly on the role played by denial, which is a defense mechanism, described by the famous Austrian neurologist
Sigmund Freud, who is also called the father of psychoanalysis. Researchers using the “denial scale” classified patients into “denying” and “nondenying” groups and studied the outcomes of recovery. It was found that denial played an important role in decreasing anxiety and even in reducing deaths in the early stages of heart attack recovery. However, during the later phases of recovery, denial added to noncompliance with medical care, decreased seeking of information about the disease, and increased the risk of recurrence of heart attack. Research comparing the specific role of repression (or denial) and sensitization to the presence of disease supports the importance of sensitization in improving the solicitation of information, social functioning, and outcomes through the reduction of complications.


Recent research on coping and heart diseases has broadened its focus, improved coping measurement tools, and studied several other dimensions of coping. The first of these dimensions is the comparison between problem-focused strategies and emotion-focused strategies as described by Lazarus. In general, it has been found that people who use a problem-focused coping strategy report better social and psychological adjustment following hospital discharge, and these approaches are beneficial in the long run for improving disease outcomes. Emotion-focused strategies have been found to be of some utility in the short term in decreasing distress but have not been found to be useful in the long term. Further, people using emotion-focused strategies have reported greater incidence of anxiety and depression as a result of the heart disease.


Another dimension of coping that researchers have studied pertains to optimism. American psychologist Charles S. Carver and his colleagues have found the beneficial effects of being optimistic when recovering from chronic heart disease. Similarly, researchers have found empirical evidence of what American psychologist Suzanne Kobasa described as hardiness, a term that comprises the trinity of control, commitment, and challenge, as being beneficial in improving psychosocial adjustment to heart disease and decreasing chances of anxiety and depression.




Cancers

Cancers are a diverse group of diseases characterized by the uncontrolled growth and spread of abnormal cells in the body. At the start of the twenty-first century, cancers were the second leading cause of death in the United States. The lifetime probability of developing cancer was estimated at one in three, and it was estimated that cancers would soon be the leading cause of death and sickness. Cancers pose special challenges for coping, as these necessitate utilization of a wide range of coping options to deal with changing and often deteriorating functional abilities, medical challenges, treatment modalities (chemotherapy, surgery, and radiotherapy), and psychosocial reactions.


Like the earlier studies on coping with heart diseases, initial work on coping with cancers also focused on the role of defense mechanisms described by Freud. More recent research on coping and cancers has focused on personal disposition styles, coping strategies as described by Lazarus, and other special mechanisms. Results from disposition style studies suggest that internal locus of control and optimistic outlook are linked to lower levels of emotional distress and better psychological adaptation to cancer. On the other hand, avoidance or escapism has been associated with higher emotional distress. Problem-based coping strategies, as described by Lazarus, have also been found to be associated with better psychosocial adaptation to cancer. On the other hand, disengagement-oriented strategies such as wishful thinking, blaming oneself, and adopting a fatalistic or resigned attitude have been found to be associated with higher levels of emotional distress and worse psychosocial adaptation to cancer. Likewise, acceptance of the diagnosis of cancer and resignation to this fact have also been found to be associated with worse psychosocial outcomes. Other coping strategies such as freely expressing feelings, denial, and seeking religion have yielded equivocal results.




Cerebrovascular Diseases

In 2011, cerebrovascular disease (CVD) was the fourth leading cause of death in the United States and represented about 5 percent of deaths from all causes, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The most severe manifestation of CVD is stroke, with transient ischemic attack being a less severe clinically apparent variant. Stroke is a major cause of disability. Besides the usual generalized coping that goes with any chronic illness, coping with stroke specifically requires speech therapy, occupational therapy, and physiotherapy.




Diabetes

Diabetes mellitus is a disease in which the body is unable to sufficiently produce and/or properly use insulin, a hormone needed by the body to use glucose. The prevalence of this disorder has consistently risen in the United States, and as of 2013, it afflicted about 10 percent of the population, according to the American Diabetes Association. Besides the usual generalized coping that goes with any chronic illness, coping with diabetes specifically requires lifelong dietary changes, changes pertaining to physical activity patterns, and, in most cases, specific medicinal usage and compliance.




Chronic Respiratory Disorders

Chronic lung diseases are a varied group of diseases that were, in 2011, identified as the third leading cause of death in the United States. According to the CDC, as of 2013, approximately fifteen million Americans reported being diagnosed with one of these disorders. The most common chronic respiratory disorders are asthma, emphysema, and chronic bronchitis. Besides the compliance to medical treatment and the usual generalized coping that goes with any chronic illness, coping with respiratory disorders entails gradual buildup of exercise stamina and effective management of stress through relaxation techniques, since many acute attacks are both exaggerated and precipitated by stress.




Chronic Musculoskeletal Disorders

Arthritis and musculoskeletal disorders were the most common causes of physical disability in the United States in 2013, affecting approximately 20 percent of the population, according to the CDC. Besides the usual generalized coping that goes with any chronic illness, these disorders require specific rehabilitative coping through physiotherapy, occupational therapy, and vocational rehabilitation.




Chronic Mental Illnesses

Poor and ineffective coping with stress often leads to persistent depression and anxiety. Besides these two common mental illnesses, other disorders such as schizophrenia, bipolar psychosis, variants of anxiety disorders, organic disorders (such as dementia and Alzheimer’s disease), and other mental illnesses pose special coping challenges for patients and their family members. Besides the usual coping strategies, coping with mental disorders specifically involves long behavioral, psychological, and social challenges and therapies.




Bibliography


Allen, Jon G. Coping with Trauma. 2d ed. Washington: American Psychiatric P, 2005. Print.



Clark, Cindy Dell. In Sickness and in Play: Children Coping with Chronic Illness. New Brunswick: Rutgers UP, 2003. Print.



Di Benedetto, Mirella, et al. "Co-Morbid Depression and Chronic Illness Related to Coping and Physical and Mental Health Status." Psychology, Health & Medicine 19.3 (2014): 253–62. Print.



Helgeson, Vicki S., and Kristin Mickelson. “Coping with Chronic Illness Among the Elderly: Maintaining Self-Esteem.” Behavior, Health, and Aging. Ed. Stephen B. Manuck, Richard Jennings, Bruce S. Rabin, and Andrew Baum. Mahwah: Erlbaum, 2000. Print.



Livneh, Hanoch. “Psychosocial Adaptation to Cancer: The Role of Coping Strategies.” Journal of Rehabilitation 66.2 (2000): 40–50. Print.



Livneh, Hanoch. “Psychosocial Adaptation to Heart Diseases: The Role of Coping Strategies. ” Journal of Rehabilitation 65.3 (1999): 24–33. Print.



McCabe, Marita P., and Elodie J. O'Connor. "Why Are Some People with Neurological Illness More Resilient Than Others." Psychology, Health & Medicine 17.1 (2012): 17–34. Print.



Moos, Rudolf H., ed. Coping with Life Crises: An Integrated Approach. New York: Plenum, 1986. Print.



Nabors, Laura A., et al. "Factors Related to Caregiver State Anxiety and Coping with a Child's Chronic Illness." Families, Systems & Health: The Jour. of Collaborative Family HealthCare 31.2 (2013): 171–80. Print.



Romas, John A., and Manoj Sharma. Practical Stress Management: A Comprehensive Workbook for Managing Change and Promoting Health. 5th ed. San Francisco: Pearson/Benjamin Cummings, 2009. Print.

Why is a reaction between sodium bicarbonate and acetic acid quicker than a reaction between calcium carbonate and acetic acid?

When acetic acid reacts with sodium bicarbonate, the following reaction takes place:


`CH_3COOH + NaHCO_3 -> CH_3COONa + H_2O + CO_2`


When acetic acid reacts with calcium carbonate, the resulting reaction can be expressed as:


`2CH_3COOH + CaCO_3 -> (CH_3COO)_2Ca + H_2O + CO_2`


In both the cases, we can see that the metal ion (sodium and calcium) is dissociated from the anionic group and this cation reacts with the acetate group to form the respective salt. 


Sodium bicarbonate reacts faster, in comparison to calcium carbonate, since there is an exchange of only 1 electron between the sodium ion and bicarbonate ion. In comparison, two electrons are donated and accepted in the case of calcium carbonate. Thus, it is easier for sodium bicarbonate to dissociate and react with the acid.


Both sodium bicarbonate and calcium carbonate are used in antacids (drugs to relieve stomach acidity) and react with hydrochloric acid.


Hope this helps. 

Monday, October 17, 2016

What kind of narrator does James Thurber use in "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty"?

In the story, and this includes Walter's daydreams, the author uses a third person narrator. Using this point of view, the narrator refers to each character as he, she, it, they, etc. "I" is used in first person narration and "you" is used in second person narration. 


Using third person narration, the author has the position of being outside the story. He (the narrator) has a privileged position in that he can describe events from any perspective. He can also describe things in a particular character's mind. This is clearly what is going on with Walter Mitty. 


The narrator is able to go back and forth in describing events in the external world and Walter's daydreams. It would be interesting to consider this story from Walter's perspective (first person), but that might not work because Walter prefers the life of his own mind. In other words, had the story been told by Walter, he could have eliminated any external events or even the nagging of his wife. So, it is possible that Thurber chose third person narration to make the transitions from external to internal (Walter's mind) more significant and pertinent to the story. We need to see how Walter absentmindedly goes through his life as he is distracted by his own daydreams, and this is effectively shown with the narrator's distance from the world of the story.

Sunday, October 16, 2016

When the Book of Genesis (4:26) says that “men began to call upon the name of the Lord,” what does it mean?

The question asks for an explication of Genesis (Chapter 4: Verse 26) from the Bible. The full verse is “and to Seth, to him also was born a son; and he called him Enos: then men began to call upon the name of the LORD.” (KJV; other translations are similar.)


 Explication of specific Bible verses always requires an understanding of the context for the verse in question. At a minimum, this means the other Bible verses leading up to that one, as well as verses which the author of that verse may be assumed to have been familiar with which would have informed their understanding in writing the specific verse. Given that the specific (human) author of Genesis is not known, nor the specific geographic or chronological context in which they recorded it, we can only incorporate the context of the rest of Genesis preceding this verse. Ultimately, interpretation can be a highly personal thing.


 The story of Genesis up to this point is the story of the initial creation, and Adam and Eve’s fall from direct relationship with God. By Book 4 of Genesis, they have been cast out of Eden, and have begun procreating. Cain has killed his brother Abel, and Adam and Eve have conceived Seth, ostensibly to replace Abel. Seth in turn sires Enos. Prior to this point, there is no record of Adam or his lineage “calling upon the name of the Lord,” which is to ask the Lord for help. More generally, calling upon the name of the Lord could be interpreted as taking the first step in establishing a relationship with God. Therefore, one could interpret this verse as saying that with the birth of Enos, humanity began the process of reconnecting or reestablishing the direct relationship with God that was lost when Adam ate of the forbidden fruit in the garden of Eden.

In To Kill a Mockingbird, how does the trial change Atticus?

Atticus is disappointed when Tom Robinson is convicted and then kills himself trying to escape prison.  He knew that he was never going to win the case, but it affects him just the same.  Although Atticus explains to his children that the case is almost unwinnable, he also tried his best and really tried to make a difference for Maycomb.  


Atticus realized that acquitting Tom Robinson, despite the lack of evidence, would be very hard for the jury.  He still tried to explain to them why they should.  He may have given one of the most important closing statements of his career. 


Atticus explained to the jury that there are good men and bad men, regardless of race.  He reminded them that there was no evidence to prove that a crime even took place, and he had proved that Mayella’s injuries could not have come from Tom.  He also showed what Mayella’s home life was like, and how her father most likely was the one who beat her up. 



“…A court is only as sound as its jury, and a jury is only as sound as the men who make it up. I am confident that you gentlemen will review without passion the evidence you have heard, come to a decision, and restore this defendant to his family. In the name of God, do your duty.” (Ch. 20) 



Atticus earned the respect of the black community, and also that of others who felt that racism had seen its day.  The case took its toll on his family though.  Although Atticus did not take Bob Ewell’s threat seriously, his children were scared.  The ultimate effect was when Ewell attacked his children, injuring Jem and possibly doing worse if Boo Radley had not intervened. 


By this time, Atticus is clearly worn down.  He thinks about the impact it will have on Jem, but Heck Tate decides that they should say that Bob Ewell fell on his knife.  This prevents either Jem or Boo Radley from taking responsibility. 



“I’m not a very good man, sir, but I am sheriff of Maycomb County. … Know everything that’s happened here since before I was born. There’s a black boy dead for no reason, and the man responsible for it’s dead. Let the dead bury the dead this time, Mr. Finch. Let the dead bury the dead.” (Ch. 30) 



Atticus thanks Boo Radley for saving his children.  Scout walks Boo home, and reflects on the events of her childhood.  The events of the book are Scout’s story, but they are also Atticus’s.

What is a coma?


Causes and Symptoms

Consciousness is defined by the normal wakeful state, with its self-aware cognition of past events and future anticipation. Disease or dysfunction that impairs this state usually causes readily identifiable conditions such as coma. The self-aware, cognitive aspects of consciousness depend largely on the interconnected neural networks of the cerebral hemispheres. Normal conscious behavior depends on the continuous, effective interaction of these systems. Loss of consciousness from medical causes can be brief (a matter of minutes to an hour or so) or it can be sustained for many hours, days, or sometimes even weeks. The longer the duration of the comatose state, the more likely it is to reflect structural damage to the brain rather than a transient alteration in its function.


The word “coma” comes from the Greek koma, meaning to put to sleep or to fall asleep. This state of unarousable unresponsiveness results from disturbance or damage to areas of the brain involved in conscious activity or the maintenance of consciousness—particularly parts of the cerebrum (the main mass of the brain), upper parts of the brain stem, and central regions of the brain, especially the limbic system. A wide spectrum of specific conditions can injure the brain and cause coma. The damage to the brain may be the result of a head injury or of an abnormality such as a brain tumor, brain abscess, or intracerebral hemorrhage. Often there has been a buildup of poisonous substances that intoxicates brain tissues. This buildup can occur because of a drug overdose, advanced kidney or liver disease, or acute alcoholic intoxication. Encephalitis (inflammation of the brain) and meningitis (inflammation of the brain coverings) can also cause coma, as can cerebral hypoxia (lack of oxygen in the brain, possibly attributable to the impairment of the blood flow to some areas). Whatever the underlying mechanism, coma indicates brain failure, and the organization of cerebral biochemical systems has been disrupted. Coma is easily distinguishable from sleep in that the person does not respond to external stimulation (such as shouting or pinching) or to the needs of his or her body (such as a full bladder).


Comas are classified according to the event or condition that caused the comatose state. Some of the most frequently encountered types of comas are traumatic coma, alcoholic coma, apoplectic coma, deanimate coma, diabetic coma, hepatic coma, metabolic coma, vigil coma, pseudo coma, and irreversible coma. Traumatic coma follows a head injury. It has a somewhat more favorable outcome than that of comas associated with medical illness. About 50 percent of patients in a coma from head injuries survive, and the recovery is closely linked to age: The younger the patient, the greater the chance for recovery. Alcoholic coma refers to the coma accompanying severe alcohol intoxication, usually more than 400 milligrams of alcohol per 100 milliliters of blood. This coma is marked by rapid, light respiration, usually with tachycardia and hypotension. Apoplectic coma is induced by cerebral, cerebellar, or brain-stem hemorrhage, as well as by embolism or cerebral thrombosis. The term “deanimate coma” refers to a deep coma with loss of all somatic and autonomic reflex activity. The maintenance of life depends wholly upon such supportive measures as assisted respiration, and cardiac arrest will quickly follow if the respirator is stopped; this may be a transient or irreversible state. Diabetic coma is the coma of severe diabetic acidosis. Hepatic coma is the coma accompanying cerebral damage resulting from degeneration of liver cells, especially that associated with
cirrhosis of the liver. “Metabolic coma” is the term applied to the coma occurring in any metabolic disorder in the absence of a demonstrable macroscopic physical abnormality of the brain. Vigil coma is defined as a state of stupor in which the patient is mute and shows no verbal or motor responses to stimuli although the eyes are open and give a false impression of alertness. Pseudo coma refers to states resembling acute unconsciousness but with self-awareness preserved. Irreversible coma, or brain death, occurs when the brain damage is so extensive that the organ enjoys no potential for recovery and can no longer maintain the body’s internal functions without life support.




Treatment and Therapy

Of the acute problems in clinical medicine, none is more difficult than the prompt diagnosis and effective management of the comatose patient. The difficulty exists partly because the causes of coma are so many and partly because the physician possesses only a limited time in which to make the appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic judgment.


Measurements of variations in the depth of coma are important in its assessment and treatment. In less severe forms, the person may respond to stimulation by, for example, moving an arm. In severe cases, the person fails to respond to repeated vigorous stimuli. Yet even deeply comatose patients may show some automatic responses, as they may continue to breathe unaided or may cough, yawn, blink, or show roving eye movement. These actions indicate that the lower brain stem, which controls these responses, is still functioning.


Assessment of the patient in a coma includes an evaluation of all vital signs, the level of consciousness, neuromuscular responses, and the reaction of the pupils to light. In most hospitals, a printed form for neurologic assessment is used to measure and record the patient’s responses to stimuli in objective terms. The Glasgow coma scale also provides a standardized tool that aids in assessing a comatose patient and eliminates the use of ambiguous and easily misinterpreted terms such as “unconscious” and “semicomatose.” Additional assessment data should include evaluation of the gag and corneal reflexes. Abnormal rigidity and posturing in response to noxious stimuli indicate deep coma.


The definitive treatment of altered states of consciousness requires removing, correcting, or halting the specific process responsible for the state to whatever degree possible. Often, accurate diagnosis and specific therapy require time, and the first priority is to protect the brain from permanent damage.


General treatment measures that apply to all patients include the following: assurance of an adequate airway passage and oxygenation; maintenance of proper circulation; intravenous administration of glucose or thiamine if the patient is undernourished; any measures necessary to stop generalized seizures; the restoration of the blood acid-base and osmolar balance; the treatment of any detected infection; the treatment and control of extreme body temperatures; the administration of specific antidotes for situations such as drug overdoses; control of agitation; and the protection of the corneas.


In the absence of the gag reflex, regurgitation and aspiration are potential problems. Tube feeding, if necessary, must be done slowly and with the head of the bed raised during the feeding and for about half an hour later. Absence of the corneal reflex can inhibit blinking and natural moistening of the eye. The cornea cannot be allowed to dry, since blindness can result; therefore, artificial tears are instilled in the eyes to keep them moist.


Once the cause of the comatose state has been determined, the appropriate steps should be taken to minimize or eliminate it whenever possible. For many causes of coma, rapid intervention and treatment can mean recuperation for the patient, such as in the cases of diabetes, removable hematomas, and drug overdose.


Comatose patients are predisposed to all the hazards of immobility, including impairment of skin integrity and the development of ulcers, contractures and joint disabilities, problems related to respiratory and circulatory status, and alterations in fluid and electrolyte balance. All these factors must be taken into consideration when dealing with the comatose patient.


The outcome from severe medical coma depends on its cause and, with the exception of depressant drug poisoning, on the initial severity and extent of neurologic damage. Depressant drug poisoning reflects a state of general anesthesia, and, barring severe complications, almost all patients who survive drug intoxication can recover physically.


The clinical tests most valuable for estimating the capacity for recovery after medical coma are identical to those used in making the initial diagnosis. Within a few hours or days after the onset of coma, many patients show neurologic signs that can differentiate, with a high probability, the future extremes of either no improvement or the capacity for good recovery. After a period of about six hours (except for patients on drugs), certain neurological findings begin to correlate with the potential for neurologic recovery and can predict the outcome of about one-third of patients who will not recover. By the end of the first day, tests can predict the two-thirds of the patients who will do well. With each successive day, the signs develop greater predictive power. Persistence of coma in an adult for more than four weeks is almost never associated with later complete recovery.




Perspective and Prospects

Attempts to define “coma” must give at least brief consideration to the concepts of consciousness. Consciousness involves not only the perception of stimuli but also the emotional implications of such stimuli, as well as the construction of intricate mental images.


Since the days of the ancient Greeks, people have known that normal conscious behavior depends on intact brain function and that disorders of consciousness are a sign of cerebral insufficiency. The range of awake and intelligent behavior is so rich and variable, however, that clinical abnormalities are difficult to recognize unless there are substantial deviations from the norm. Impaired, reduced, or absent conscious behavior implies the presence of severe brain dysfunction and demands urgent attention if recovery is to be expected. The brain can tolerate only a limited amount of physical or metabolic injury without suffering irreparable harm, and the longer the failure lasts, the narrower the margin between recovery and the development of permanent neurologic invalidism.


Since such researchers as Pierre Mollaret and Maurice Goulon first examined the question in 1959, many others have tried to establish criteria that would accurately determine that the brain is dead or about to die, no matter what therapeutic measures one undertakes. In 1968, the Harvard Medical School Ad Hoc Committee to Examine the Definition of Brain Death established criteria for determining irreversible coma, or brain death. These criteria are often used to complement the traditional criteria for determining death. All other existing guidelines, such as the Swedish, British, and United States Collaborative Study Criteria, include nearly identical clinical points but contain some differences as to the duration of observation necessary to establish the diagnosis as well as the emphasis to be placed on laboratory procedures in diagnosis.


Techniques such as computed tomography (CT) scanning, electroencephalography (EEG), and functional magnetic magnetic resonance imagery (fMRI) have transformed the process of diagnosis in clinical neurology, with technology sometimes replacing clinical deduction. The art of diagnosis, however, is to comprehend the whole picture—where the lesion is, what it comprises, and above all, what it is doing to the patient.


Advances in resuscitative medicine have made obsolete the traditional clinical definition of death, that is, the cessation of heartbeat. Cardiac
resuscitation can salvage patients after periods of asystole lasting up to several minutes. Cardiopulmonary bypass machines permit the patient’s heartbeat to cease for several hours with full clinical recovery after resuscitation. While respiratory depression formerly meant death within minutes, modern mechanical ventilators can maintain pulmonary oxygen exchange indefinitely. Such advances have permitted many patients with formerly lethal cardiac, pulmonary, and neuromuscular disease to return to relatively full and healthy lives. Abundant clinical evidence, however, demonstrates that severe damage to the brain can completely destroy the organ’s vital functions and capacity to recover, even when the other parts of the body still live. The result has been to switch the emphasis in defining death to a cessation of brain function. Brain death occurs when brain damage is so extensive that the organ has no potential for recovery and cannot maintain the body’s internal functions. Countries worldwide have adopted the principle that death occurs when either the brain or the heart irreversibly fails in its functions. In the United States, the time of brain death has been accepted as the time of the person’s death in legal terms.


The determination of whether a comatose patient is brain-dead or can possibly recuperate is extremely important. Issues such as organ transplant programs that require the donation of healthy organs and the economic and emotional expense involved in the treatment and care of a comatose patient make it critical to know when to fight for life and when to diagnose death.


In carrying out the many details of the physical care and assessment of the comatose patient, health care personnel must not lose sight of the fact that the patient is a fellow human being and a member of a family. One cannot always be sure exactly how much the patients are aware of what is being said or done as care is given. Whatever the level of awareness and response, comatose patients should be told what will be done to and for them, as they deserve the same respect afforded alert and aware patients.




Bibliography


Bongard, Frederick, and Darryl Y. Sue, eds. Current Critical Care Diagnosis and Treatment. 3d ed. New York: McGraw-Hill Medical, 2008.



"Coma." Mayo Clinic, October 12, 2012.



"Coma / Vegetative State." Brainline, 2013.



Dowshen, Steven. "What Is a Coma?" Nemours Foundation, October 2011.



Goldman, Lee, and Dennis Ausiello, eds. Goldman's Cecil Medicine. 24th ed. Philadelphia: Saunders/Elsevier, 2011.



Leikin, Jerrold B., and Martin S. Lipsky, eds. American Medical Association Complete Medical Encyclopedia. New York: Random House Reference, 2003.



Miller, Benjamin F., Claire Brackman Keane, and Marie T. O’Toole. Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health. Rev. 7th ed. Philadelphia: Saunders/Elsevier, 2005.



"NINDS Coma Information Page." National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, February 11, 2013.



Plum, Fred, and J. B. Posner. The Diagnosis of Stupor and Coma. 4th ed. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007.



Ropper, Alan H., et al. Neurological and Neurosurgical Intensive Care. 4th ed. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2004.

What are hearing tests?

Indications and Procedures Hearing tests are done to establish the presence, type, and sever...