Sake Essays

  • Poems for the Eye Are Not Merely for the Sake of Eye

    1786 Words  | 4 Pages

    Poems for the Eye Are Not Merely for the Sake of Eye What is poetry? Pressed for an answer, Robert Frost made a classic reply: “Poetry is the kind of thing poets write.” In all likelihood, Frost was not trying merely to evade the question but to chide his questioner into thinking for himself. A trouble with definitions is that they may stop thought. The nature of poetry eludes simple definitions. Definitions will be of little help at first, if we are to know poetry and respond to it. We have to

  • Sake Sake History

    802 Words  | 2 Pages

    Sake referred to Japanese rice wine which made by fermenting rice. Sake brewing is important sector of the Japanese. Sake brewing process more akin to that of beer, where starch is converted into sugars which ferment into alcohol. The ingredient for fermentation of sake is rice koji, a kind of fungi grown on rice. Sake brewing using only rice as a material can yet produce fruity aromas such as those of apple, melon, or banana. Sake has been made in over 1000 years all over the Japanese islands. The

  • Why Do We Choose Virtuous Acts?

    2600 Words  | 6 Pages

    Aristotle says that we learn which acts are virtuous, choose virtuous acts for their own sake, and acquire virtuous habits by performing virtuous acts. According to Burnyeat, Aristotle thinks this works successfully because virtuous acts are pleasant. The learner’s virtuous choices and passions are positively reinforced. I argue that Burnyeat’s interpretation fails because virtuous acts are not typically pleasant for learners or, perhaps surprisingly, even for virtuous people. Instead, I maintain

  • Reasons Nora Helmer Must Leave Her Husband in Henrik Ibsen's A Doll House

    1719 Words  | 4 Pages

    condemn her, shows that this system is not as dead as one might hope. That Nora's case requires pleading in this day and age is regrettable. Yet, here is her case. Thesis: Nora Helmer must leave her husband and children for their sake, for her own sake, and for the sake of society. The following assumes familiarity with the details of the play. That she must leave for the good of Torvald: He must learn manners. Despite all, he deserves not to be lied to or played to. He needs to be told he is

  • Wallace Stegner's Wilderness Letter

    1198 Words  | 3 Pages

    Stegner’s “Wilderness Letter,” he is arguing that the countries wilderness and forests need to be saved. For a person to become whole, Stegner argues that the mere idea of the wild and the forests are to thank. The wilderness needs to be saved for the sake of the idea. He insinuates that anyone in America can just think of Old faithful, Mt. Rainier, or any other spectacular landform, even if they have not visited there, and brought to a calm. These thoughts he argues are what makes us as people whole

  • Ethics Of The Hellenistic World

    1250 Words  | 3 Pages

    is valued for its own sake, and not for the sake of anything else. Epicurus also agreed with Aristotle that happiness is the highest good. However, he disagreed with Aristotle by identifying happiness with pleasure. Epicurus gave two reasons for this. The main reason was that pleasure is the only thing that people do having value just for its own sake; that is, Epicurus' ethical hedonism is based upon his psychological hedonism. Everything we do, he claimed, we do for the sake of ultimately gaining

  • Citizenship and Government in Henry Thoreau's Civil Disobedience

    772 Words  | 2 Pages

    Citizenship and Government in Henry Thoreau's Civil Disobedience Philosophers, historians, authors, and politicians have spent centuries pondering the relationship between citizens and their government. It is a question that has as many considerations as there are forms of government and it is rarely answered satisfactorily. A relatively modern theorist, author Henry Thoreau, introduced an idea of man as an individual, rather than a subject, by thoroughly describing the way a citizen should

  • Isaiah 62

    1427 Words  | 3 Pages

    Isaiah 62 For Zion’s sake I will not keep silent, for Jerusalem’s sake I will not remain quiet, till her righteousness shines out like the dawn, her salvation like a blazing torch. The nations will see your righteousness, and all kings your glory; you will be called by a new name that the mouth of the Lord will bestow. You will be a crown of splendor in the Lord’s hand, a royal diadem in the hand of your God. No longer will they call you Deserted, or name your lane Desolate. But you will be called

  • The Merchant Of Venice - Jews

    577 Words  | 2 Pages

    only because Jessica converted to Christianity. Lorenzo said, “If e’er the Jew her father come to heaven, / It will be for his gentle daughter’s sake…” (2.4.36-7) When Lorenzo says this, he is implying that Shylock’s faith and his Jewish heritage is not strong enough to get him into heaven. Lorenzo says that if Shylock is saved, it is by his Jessica’s sake, because she has chosen Christianity over Judaism. This statement implies that Lorenzo believes that Christianity is the religion that is powerful

  • The Sacrifice of Life

    931 Words  | 2 Pages

    A simple definition of sacrifice is to give up something for the sake of something else, whether it is for another human life, for an idea, or even for a belief. “She was 17 years old. He stood glaring at her, his weapon before her face. ‘Do you believe in God?’ She paused. It was a life-or-death question. ‘Yes, I believe in God.’ ‘Why?’ asked her executioner. But he never gave her the chance to respond. The teenage girl lay dead at his feet.” (DC Talk 17) This example of a sacrifice really happened

  • The Real Purpose of a University Education

    2214 Words  | 5 Pages

    be an issue. College is what the student makes it. However they view college, all of the students will come out with some very similar experiences and benefits. I often hear professors grumbling about students who don’t value learning for the sake of learning. They feel that students who view college as job training may as well be in some vocational school, leaving university life for the more “enlightened” among us. This seems ridiculous to me. The majority of people in the United States

  • Identifying the Main Character in The Use of Force

    510 Words  | 2 Pages

    story. All attention and focus is on Matilda employing care to her appearance as well as her fluster. Matilda just would not allow Olson to take cultures from the back of her throat. Olson’s blunt remarks to Matilda’s naïve parents “for heavens sake...she might have diphtheria and possibly die from it,” doesn’t affect the child in the least. Nothing changes. Diphtheria is an infectious disease in which a membrane forms over the air passage. Olson orders one parent, whom he subconsciously had not

  • Eudaimonia and Human Flourishing

    1860 Words  | 4 Pages

    else, desire will be empty and futile. 1.2. We have a gut feeling that some desires are not empty and futile. 1.3. Therefore, we do not choose everything because of something else. 1.4. Therefore we choose something for its own sake. 1.5. What we choose for its own sake, therefore, must be the best good. Th... ... middle of paper ... ...nt role in helping us remain active and virtuous. We can apply a broader application of this search for happiness by allowing lives other than that of study

  • Nora's Discovery of Self in Ibsen's A Doll's House

    1412 Words  | 3 Pages

    However, when Torvald becomes ill, it becomes Nora's responsibility to provide for his recovery.  Of course, Torvald, mustn't know anything about Nora borrowing money for his sake, which the situation demands.  So Nora is thrown into a dilemma.  Here her first decision to disobey her husband's wishes, in point of fact for the sake of her love for hi... ... middle of paper ... ...e would long ago have told him about her troubles."  (294) Works Cited: Gray, Ronald. "Henrik Ibsen." European

  • Alfred North Whitehead and John Dewey

    613 Words  | 2 Pages

    stages in which education travels. Whitehead felt that romance was the first stage of education. Dewey stated that the pupil must first “ have a genuine situation of experience—that there be a continuous activity in which he is interested for its own sake.” He continues with the methods that would best help the pupil to formulate their own conclusions. “Secondl...

  • William Shakespeare's Hamlet

    721 Words  | 2 Pages

    hardly a man in any audience to whom that word “madness”, in some one of its meanings, has not at one time or another come dreadfully home.” “[Gertrude] is shown sensually in love with Claudius, and seductive enough to make him commit murder for her sake”. This shows Gertrude as a vixen and suggests that she is the reason that Claudius commited murder. “Hamlet rages at her no more. But the compassion stirred in him soon hardens to irony. He has, she tells him...

  • Logging

    545 Words  | 2 Pages

    relaxing sleep, it puts them through a long, agonising death, and it may take hours or even days of suffering for these native animals to die. What is at stake you may ask? Is the loss of some of Australia's, and the worlds, oldest hardwood trees for the sake of some measly woodchips a good enough argument, I certainly think so. The tall trees of the Styx are of international botanical importance. Their tourism potential has yet to be realised. They provide a point of contact with the past that once gone

  • Handling the Issues of Rage and Murder in Poetry

    551 Words  | 2 Pages

    the speaker wants to kill. In 'Education for Leisure' the speaker thinks that his readiness to kill makes him somehow smarter then anyone else. This is shown when the speaker says; "I am a genius..." The speaker seems to kill for killing sake. This sadism is shown in line five when the speaker says; I squash a fly against the window with my thumb. We did that at school. Shakespeare." This can be interpreted in two ways, one way is that killing and Shakespeare can be associated

  • Grendel and the Importance of Human Values

    755 Words  | 2 Pages

    why he kills cows instead of deer: they have more meat and are easier to catch. Although it's not necessarily a pleasant thought, it's somewhat comforting to know that Grendel appears to kill for the practical benefits (food) and not simply for the sake of killing. This is no worse than we might do. He seems especially human-like when he listens to the Shaper's song. Crying, he says that he was "filled with sorrow and tenderness" (44) and that he was "torn apart by poetry" (44). Another moment of

  • What is Heat?

    776 Words  | 2 Pages

    third material is also a solid, we just have conduction from hot to third material, and from third material to cold solid, category (1), already dealt with, phooey. But if the third material is a liquid or gas, something new can happen. Suppose for the sake of argument the hot solid is on the bottom, the cold on top, and a liquid in between. This describes things like a saucepan on the stove or the inside of the Earth. A hot atom will jostle a neighbor cold atom in the liquid, heating it up. When a layer