Phineas Flynn

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    success in life are influenced by genes and also by experience”.(82).” Duckworth supports her claim through the use of anecdotal stories and researchreferencing studies conducted by researchers. One example Duckworth uses includes the “Flynn Effect,”(83) attributed to Jim Flynn. He analyzed IQ scores and its rapid growth through the decades to explain how it is socially multiplied. In general, Duckworth attempts to convince the audience that the characteristics making up a person come from one’s genes as

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    Ryan Abdullah 11.2 (a) What is meant by the term innate intelligence? [2] It is a form of intelligence that is said to be derived from decadence through heredity. (b) Describe two factors that may influence a person’s level of intelligence. [4] Diet, the intake of a proper balanced diet containing a variety of different foods is necessary for the physical development of an individual within a society. If an individual does not develop properly, he/she will not be able to perform at the same level

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    The Flynn Theory

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    There is a theory in psychology, called the Flynn effect that basically shows that each generation is roughly 10 IQ points higher than its immediate predecessor. According to this theory, if someone was born with an average IQ in the 1940s, the IQ change will have been so drastic in the time between then and now, that they would actually be found to be mentally impaired by todays standard of IQ test. Although only discovered in the 1930s, it is widely accepted that this has always been occurring

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    Phineas P. Gage Essay

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    Phineas P. Gage was born in 1823. He was a railroad construction worker outside a small town of Cavendish, Vermont. On September 13, 1848, Phineas suffered from a traumatic brain injury, which caused severe damage to parts of his frontal brain due to his accident at work. The day of Phineas accident, he was performing his work duties on the construction of a railroad track. His duty was to set explosive charges in holes drilled into large pieces of rock so that they could be broken up and removed

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    community, my social group and my micro community. These factors have shaped me to the person I am today. Today, I live in a small city that is known as the “Heart of the Harbor”, Wilmington. According to "Early Views of San Pedro and Wilmington", Phineas Banning procured the 640 acres of land that would get to be Wilmington. The 21-mile railroad was built in the late 1860’s by Banning and the new railroad drastically decreased the cost of transporting goods to and from San Pedro ("Early Views of San

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    Brain Science Beliefs

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    may not know the stories and lives of Phineas Gage, Henrietta Lacks, and Douglas Mawson. What you should know is that they all impacted the scientific community in major ways. Whether they changed brain science, changed how we study and search for cures for diseases or changed how people study and explore the Antarctic. Although their experiences may have been very different, they all greatly impacted the scientific community. Whether it’s about how Phineas Gage suffered major brain injury and underwent

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    Phineas Gage, Lucky or Unlucky? Survivors of traumatic brain injury are lucky. Two examples of lucky traumatic brain injury survivors are Phineas Gage and Gary Busey. These two are lucky along with the other millions of traumatic brain injury survivors. Phineas Gage and Gary Busey were both lucky because they were given a second chance at life. In addition both narrowly evaded death. Phineas Gage, a traumatic brain injury survivor, was lucky. The first reason Phineas Gage was lucky is that the

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    Phineas Gage Summary

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    Imagine your sitting at home watching the news, a reporter talks about a man surviving a three-foot iron pole being blown through his skull and taking a chunk of his brain out. This was an actual story that happened to a man named Phineas Gage back in 1848, long before modern neuroscience and medication. Gage was a railroad track builder for the town of Cavendish, Vermont. While he was working, a man uses dynamite to blow away rocks that are blocking the way of the railroad tracks. The dynamite goes

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    beginning to fall off. The seasoned explorer, Douglas Mawson had suffered a lot through his race; he contributed to science, yet still was able to survive. Henrietta Lacks had her cells taken for scientific purposes without permission from her family. Phineas Gage survived an extreme dynamite accident which resulted in him having a hole in his head made by an iron rod. Although you can make a good argument on who endured the most adversity while contributing to science, Douglas Mawson did suffer a lot;

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    yet still two other people that faced adversity and contributed to science. Henrietta Lacks was second in facing the most adversity in the course of contributing to science, she has a cancer and she dies at the age of thirty- one from the cancer. Phineas Gage had the least amount adversity in the course of contributing to science, he was working one day and a metal pole blasted through his head and he lived for eleven years after that. Douglas Mawson endured the most adversity in the course of contributing

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