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    The Turning Essay

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    The novels ‘Big World’ and ‘Aquifer’ reveal deep insights into personal discoveries. Tim Winton explores personal discoveries of guilt through the narrators of both short stories. Both stories share similar traits, their main characters reflect on the past to discover their personal guilt. The narrator of Big World plans a road trip to escape from his home town and his failed final high school exams. He embarks on his trip, aware that his mother plans for him to repeat year 12 and begin a brighter

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    Discovery Essay

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    Discovery Essay Discovery inhibits the ability to embrace new beginnings and accept a sense of change whether it is found or forced upon an individual. The places you travel and the people you meet can emotionally revolutionize a self-discovery through unexpected but anticipated terms evoked from curiosity. ‘Swallow The Air’ written by Tara June Winch and ‘The Thing Around Your Neck’ written by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie break the inhibitions of vulnerability, as their ideas represented through

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    that is expensive to employ. Electronic Discovery (e-discovery) is technology that has cut down on this time and cost, and has significantly changed the legal world. It is software that can analyze documents and extract key words or phrases. In a case concerning CBS, lawyers and paralegals examined 6 million documents at a cost of $2.2 million. With the use of e-discovery, one company was able to examine 1.5 million documents for $100,000. E-discovery can help lawyers pick out words, phrases

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    try and get a message or an idea across. For some topics its easier than others, but when you’re trying and prove the whole idea of discovery wrong it may be more difficult. Thomas Kuhn writes Historical Structure of Scientific Discovery in an attempt to try and convey his message that the timeline role of discovery is wrong. He denies the idea about how some discoveries are misleading and make it seem they were found in a single moment. When you write you must assume that anyone can read it, so you

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    Discoveries that are confronting can provoke us to change, due to the realisations and findings we may encounter. These mind-altering discoveries can transform our values, actions and future pathways. Both William Shakespeare’s romantic comedy ‘tempest’ exploring the connotations of, hierarchy, power, love and reconciliation, coinciding with Lenny Abrahamson’s’ adaptation of the true story ‘Room’ whereby an exploited teen and her son jack, plot the escape from their captor’s imprisonment, while learning

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    Lost. What a standard term. One that is often associated with a child wandering off in a grocery store, or somebody taking the wrong turn and not arriving at the correct destination. But the trouble is that it is hardly ever associated with anything deeper, such as the human soul. Yet the reality is, everybody’s soul is indeed a little bit lost. And if not lost, at least diverted to a path of pure monotony that drives them to forget the importance of the little things in life. An example of this

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    Discovery comprises the understanding of uncovering something for the first time or refinding something that has been forgotten or something has not yet been explored. Disclosures can be provoking and confronting. The impact can be transformative. They are able to lead us to new worlds and values, venture new thoughts, and allow us to gamble about future possibilities. Their effect can be life-changing for the individual and for a broader community. discovery may be interrogated or confronted when

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    its core. A long time ago when there was not nearly as much knowledge of chemistry and the medicine was much more basic as well. All of medicine is made of different elements in one way or another. Chemistry will probably also have impacts on the discoveries in medicine yet to come. Back in the 1200’s the human race had just discovered the circulation of blood. That shows how far we have come with modern medicine. Things like vaccines and even genetics such as DNA would never have been discovered if

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    In the stories, Anthem, by Ayn Rand, and By the Waters of Babylon, by Stephen Vincent Benet, each of the main characters posses a desire deep within themselves to discover things that they do not already know about. Equality and John both live in societies where almost all knowledge of the past has been forgotten. These communities are enveloped in superstition, which causes them to fear the unknown. The desire within Equality and John, however, brings them past these fears and leads them to learn

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    Pi was forced to alter aspects of his identity in order to overcome his hunger and the threat of death while stranded, and altering these morals led to him discovering new aspects of his identity. For example, an aspect that Pi was forced to alter was his morals. One of his morals was being a strict vegetarian, and avoiding killing innocent animals. However, after his emergency rations of biscuits and chocolate ran out, he was forced to start killing fish, turtles, and other sea life in order to

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