In Chapter 16 of “The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate” the darwin states “Although some species may be now increasing, more or less rapidly, in numbers, all cannot do so, for the world would not hold them.” This darwin tells the readers that everything is growing so fast and there is nothing anybody can do about it. By the name of the chapter, everybody knows what Jacqueline Kelly means. Technology is going to overtake all the humans one day. “ Change is coming” Callie said, and she is right. This title can not connect to the chapter more than it already is. The darwin says that the world would not hold on to the telephone, but when anybody thinks about it, the readers know what it means. It means that, even though the world is changing, people
Calpurnia, or “Cal”, was the Finch’s African-American housekeeper and cook. Her being a black, middle-aged woman in a white dominated society, we can already infer she has experienced great racial injustices. Throughout the novel, we see significant and noticeable changes in the main characters, but little development in Calpurnia´s character. Before you discard this essay on what was supposed to be about a chosen character changing due to social and racial injustices throughout the book, give the thesis some thought. Scout is the narrator of the book, therefore we are seeing changes through her point of view; so we only see Calpurnia changing through the eyes of Scout, but they were not in actuality
Clive Thompson compares the critique and advocate of the telephones past and present. Today the telephone is believed to have changed the way people communicate on a day to day basis; causing less face to face intimacy and more texting. Thompson sites several present day sources of which blame texting for diminishing personal conversation. Thompson claims “the telephone was a teleportation device, bringing other people -- including, disconcertingly, strangers -- suddenly into one's home.” Therefore making the simplicity of speaking with someone in person, seem outdated. After the telephone, there was texting. Texting began to even make phone calls look retro according to journalist Jenna
THESIS: In today’s world, the phone often provides a primary source of access to both social support and necessary data for school and extracurricular activities,” Dodgen-Magee says. “To simply yank it away would be like taking away the support of a bridge with nothing in its place.”
Today, phones play a major role in individuals. In “How Smartphones Hijack Our Minds,” Nicholas Carr uses straightforward diction, studies, and figurative language such as, personification to reveal that individuals are powerless without their phones. Throughout the reading he explained how the brain grows dependent on phone technology, the intellect weakens.
The book is set in a small Texan town (Fentress) that is prone to chronic heat waves. The town is surrounded by greenery, farms and fields. Callie Vee (Calpurnia Tate) often explores San Marcos River. The river was separated from her house by a crescent-shaped field of five acres of feral, uncleared woods. There is a thin, clear path created by dogs, deer and other animals. There are high bushes of sticky burrs. There are “bags” of webworms above the river like a canopy of oaks and high bushes. Around Calpurnia’s house there are hundreds of insects that gather around the porch (grasshoppers, fireflies, spiders etc.).
Cell phones have changed the communication game forever, for better or for worse. With the presence of cell phones, distance is no longer a communication barrier. Talking to family thousands of miles away can now be done with the touch of a few buttons. The cell phone has brought the world closer together than it ever has before, and it is arguably the most unique technology humans have ever created. Many past creations have had comparisons, such as cars to horses and airplanes to birds. In contrast, “nothing in the animal world could allow humans the power bestowed by the cell phone” (Katz 1). There is no animal with the ability to communicate with another animal across thousands of miles within seconds. The cell phone is unlike anything we have ever created, and it is creating opportunities we never could have dreamed of.
Technology today has advanced and impacted our way of living and the dependence on it has become a natural habit for our society. People today depend on their phones for numerous things such as, talking, messaging, driving directions, surfing the web or even to update their current Facebook status. Many people say that since they rely so heavily on technology, it has been known to weaken our society’s ability to open a book or newspaper to find information instead of looking at your phone. Technology has become a crutch for our generation today and without it we would fail. There have been inferences that technology will ruin us and lead us to extinction. In Ray Bradbury’s short story “There Will Come Soft Rains”, he purveys speculation that technology is the cause of downfall in society and that nature will outlast man’s creation.
Dr. Forsyth implements plenty of evidence as well as proven statistics to back up his outlook on these issues. The growth of human population is happening at an exponential rate, implying that in a short period of time population growth will double. “We find it difficult to comprehend exponential growth, but it may prove to be our fatal blind spot” [3]. When analysing the world’s population over a long period of time, it took roughly 19,000 years for the world’s population to go from 5million people to 500 million people in 1500 A.D. [4] With an estimated population of 7.5 billion people [5], for a period less than 1000 years, population increased more than 1500 times its size than it was in the 1500’s. In addition, on a more minute scale of time, in 1950 the world’s population was roughly 2.5 billion people [6] in merely 50 years the world’s population has tripled. With these statics, it is evident that the world’s population is increasing at an incomprehensive rate. With populations at their peak, overconsumption is another problem this world faces, as Dr. Forsyth affirms “humans consume far more than their fair share of the Earth’s natural productivity.”[7] Due to this over consumption of resources, there is a vast demand for cheap food which results in the clear cutting of large forest to generate room for new plantations of food. When doing so, humans destroy habitats that
Cyntoia Brown is a 16 years old girl sentenced to life in prison for killing a man named Johnny Allen. Brown reasoning for killing the man was because she felt that he was going to kill her because of the way he was acting and the guns that he owned was visible on the bed. In addition, she knew that if he was to kill her, she did not have a gun and there was no way that her family would ever know what happened to her. Some background about this girl Cyntoia Brown was that when she was born, not even two years later her mother Georgina Mitchell gave her up for adoption due to her drug and alcohol problems. Brown has experienced some hardship growing up and has done all sorts of things to feel wanted and accepted. She was found guilty, tried
Earth has not yet, reached its carrying capacity. Many people believe that Earth’s resources are running out due to the human population exponential growth, and the linear growth of food supply. The document, “Has Earth Reached its Carrying Capacity?” by Julia Layton, points out the fact that if the human population does more to extend the amount of resources available to us, we can increase Earth’s carrying capacity. For example, On page one, Paragraph four, Layton writes, “...technological advancement... they(scientist) have argued that this human ability allows food production to grow exponentially, as well.” Many advances in technology have giving us a wide range of information. Some of which could help us, now or in the future, to create
Within the prominent novel feed, M. T. Anderson contributes his beliefs to those who have already challenged the fate of humanity with his phenomenal characterization, ingenious formatting, and heartbreaking setting to expose man’s most renowned disease, technology. This monstrosity may prevail if we as humans continue to accept technology into our daily lives. Schools resorting to online assignments instead of pen and paper making it impossible to succeed without the proper technology. Billions of factories and cars pollute the environment; the world falling apart while we listen to ads on the radio for sales on TV's. And now over ninety percent of adults leave home with a cellphone on their person. Anderson’s feed may take place in the future,
As I am reading this story, I questioned whether Calipurnia or Aunt Alexandra is a better mom. I think Calipurnia is a better mom for many different reasons. She puts more time into the kids than Aunt Alexandra, and she genuinely cares for the kids and wants to keep them safe. To start off with, Calipurnia puts a lot more time into the kids than Aunt Alexandra does. On many occasions Calipurnia has made things for Scout and Jem to eat or drink like a mother would. For example, she said, “she did give Jem a hot biscuit-and-butter which he tore in half and shared with me” (Lee 137). This shows that not only would Calipurnia make their every meal, but she would sometimes give the kids some snacks while she was cooking in the kitchen too. In addition, Scout said that, “We skulked around the kitchen until Calipurnia threw us out” (Lee 137).
T. Anderson’s fabulous masterpiece feed gives no light say to the destructive path technology has taken to possess humans. Unlike the majority of authors, Anderson does not capitalize his chapter titles resembling the characters in that proper punctuation renders useless in a society that talks not with pen and paper, but through technology. Technology even replaces the need for physical movement of the vocal cord to communicate, and school, changes from a place of learning how to use our brain to how to use technology. Anderson also shows the effects technology has on us with his formatting by implementing ads and news reports from the feed at the end of some of the chapters that displays technology has taken control of humans. It doesn’t matter how much one loves “the cola with the refreshing taste of citrus and butter;” this has to grow old really fast (Anderson 26).
The article, “A Matter of Scale,” urges the audience to observe the small and extraordinary components of the biosphere and acknowledge its genetic variations as explained by Darwin’s theory of evolution. However, Kelly’s essay, “Evolution: An Article of Faith,” considers Darwin’s theory as a “false religion” suppressing God’s ability to create the “work of intelligence.” (Evolution) The heated debate over the credibility of Darwin’s theory of evolution has led to the division of scientific and religious groups. Devoted, religious people discover two major flaws with Darwin’s theory of evolution regarding the inaccuracies of the fossil record and the contradicting phrase “survival of the fittest” that has passed on harmful mutations to next
The next article I am looking at is the one by Catton (1987) titled The world’s most Polymorphic species. This article mainly revolves around our understanding go the term “carrying capacity” and the common misconception of the word. The author tries to go beyond basic definitions and actually makes an effort to integrate the sociological and biological concept of carrying capacity as one. He further states that “carrying capacity needs to be understood as the maximum load an environment can permanently support (without reduction of its ability to support future generations.” The load referred does not just apply to the number of users of a environment but tot he total demands they make upon it (Catton, 1987).