Void type Essays

  • Out Board Propeller Dynamics

    1002 Words  | 3 Pages

    find a propeller that would operate effectively near the surface. The follow is some of the things I learned while solving this problem. As the propeller rotates (fig 3-1) it forces water down and back as this is happening water must move into the void created by the spiraling blades. This creates a pressure differential across the blade- Low pressure on the back side and high pressure on the front side. This causes water to be sucked into the propeller and accelerated out the back (fig 3-3) much

  • CONTRACT ESSAY

    1571 Words  | 4 Pages

    whatever medium, and agree terms of a contract, then a contract will be concluded between them, notwithstanding that one has deceived the other thinking that he has the identity of a third party. In such a situation the contract will be voidable but not void... While I was strongly attached to this solution, I find myself unable to adopt it. Per Lord Philips of Maltravers in Shogun Finance Ltd v Hudson [2003] UKHL 62; [2004] 1 AC 919 at [167]-[170] Explain why you agree or disagree with the approach of

  • I never finished anything

    725 Words  | 2 Pages

    have projects that I started and never finished. Nothing in my life had ever struck a cord in my mind so fiercely I was compassionate enough to drive myself to the brink of insanity to accomplish it. I guess I just want fulfillment, but I only feel a void big enough to fit in Crater Lake. I always wanted to play an instrument. In 7th grade I got a chance to. I started playing the Viola. I was instantly great at it. I practiced and practiced my heart out. I even achieved a superior on a solo I performed

  • Primitive Man's Relationship with Fire and the Environment

    1266 Words  | 3 Pages

    an ancestor of man who lived from about 2 million to roughly 200,000 years ago. It is commonly believed that h. erectus was a creature existing in technological stasis, without the ability to advance his existence through innovation, and void of culture. This type of thinking could quickly be altered, though, if recent discoveries hold true. Recent evidence points to a distinct possibility that h. erectus may have been the first ancestor of man to harness the power of fire. Such a finding would greatly

  • Buddhism And The Poetry Of Jac

    2135 Words  | 5 Pages

    proves itself to be a very good example of his writing as spiritual commentary. Kerouac, while wandering the country in freight cars and the backs of pick-up trucks, saw himself as a modern day sage or bodhisatva, discovering the essence of “the void'; and using his literature as a record of these discoveries. His body of work is a wonderful example of integrating Buddhism into the daily life and thought of a man living in a western culture. Kerouac could not help but find religion in every aspect

  • Stoic Hypocrisy and the Corporeality of Lekta

    2348 Words  | 5 Pages

    Stoics seems to use the incorporeal somethings as a means to categorize, locate, and evaluate those things which are bodily. In their incorporeals, the Stoics include lekta (which I will discuss later, as it is an integral part of their causality), void, place and time. Stoic causality, a largely deterministic discussion of events in a fated world, discusses the alteration of bodies without defining any bodies as effects. In characterizing the effects of causation as only lekta, I believe the Stoics

  • Creative Writing: The Storm

    994 Words  | 2 Pages

    I burst through the front door of the quiet country home, shotgun in hand as a monster of a storm let loose with a waterfall effect outside. The house itself looked abandoned, all the lights were out, and a layer of grimy dust covered everything. A flash of green lightning, immediately followed by a roar of thunder so loud that it shook the windows told me that this was no natural storm, and the fact that it was originating directly above this house told me I was in the right place. From below the

  • memo for motion against summary judgment

    1945 Words  | 4 Pages

    responsibilities involving the fencing club. The bargaining power of Crowell was so grossly unequal so as to put Lajuana Barnett at the mercy of Crowell’s negligence. Lastly, the exculpatory clause contained in the release form (see release form) is void as against public policy. Consequently, under Maryland law, it is up to the trier of fact to determine if the exculpatory clause is unenforceable. As such, there is a dispute as to the genuine issue of material fact related to Crowell’s Answer, Crowell

  • SHALL WE DANCE ? LIFE AS A DANCE FLOOR?

    1193 Words  | 3 Pages

    ingratitude? Should one be allowed to pursue individual goals? At what cost? John (Richard Gere) and Beverly (Susan Sarandon) Clark are comfortably married. They have two children, and he a good job as a lawyer. Yet, he is not ‘happy’. He fills the void in his life by impulsively shooting out of his commuter train seat up the stairs of Miss Mitzi’s Dance School after being captivated by Paulina (Jennifer Lopez) gazing out of the school window. A clumsy, shy, reluctant dancer at first, he taps a hidden

  • Sarah Jeannette Duncan’s A Mother in India

    684 Words  | 2 Pages

    or spiritual mother because Helena is not emotionally equipped to be anything else other than a servant to her husband. Her life has been pre-arranged by a series of male allowances and dictates. Helena and Cecily’s relationship must be emotionally void to work within the shallow, materialistic pre-arrangement of their lives. Helena has nothing to offer her daughter but the emptiness that she’s acquired over her lifetime. Helena has spent her life in an emotional vacuum. When Helena is forced to

  • Coexistence of Contrary States in Blake’s The Tyger

    1871 Words  | 4 Pages

    resolution purposely has no doubt or ambiguity surrounding its initial message of love, tranquility, Jesus Christ, and above all, innocence. The speaker sees God in terms he can understand - gentle and kind and very much like us (Reinhart 25). A tremendous void is clearly apparent. The poem’s straightforwardness leaves the reader with a discomforting feeling of the need for a more sophisticated perspective on the relationship between maker and humanity. This instinctual need for a contrary state gives birth

  • Georgia O'Keeffe

    1313 Words  | 3 Pages

    original abstractions in exuberant rainbows or colors. These colors seemed to celebrate her happiness. One of her paintings Music--Pink and Blue I, she encircles a "blue vaginal void with pulsating waves of rippling pink and white" (Lisle 102). From just looking at this picture you would not think that it was a vaginal void. There is always so much that you can get from a picture. Everyone that looks at it will definitely have a different interpretation of what they see in it. The white sizing

  • Terry McMillan's Women

    1643 Words  | 4 Pages

    siblings and children, but, above all, McMillan stresses their relationships with men.  McMillan's maincharacters need these close ties to other people to survive and be happy. Women depend on other women in each book.  Friends and sisters help fill a void by  giving and needing support, but these relationships fulfill only part of the connection they long for.  In Waiting to Exhale the bonds between four women are solid.  They support one another during rough times with men, husbands, jobs and all the

  • The Powerful Message of Beckett's That Time

    2183 Words  | 5 Pages

    uncomforting effect of silence. Through the use of stream-of-consciousness and three alternating voices which flow almost entirely without a break, Beckett truly taps into the core of human consciousness and one of man's most extreme fears, the fear of the void, of nothingness, of never being able to recreate "that time" again. As is common to Beckett's work, the stage setting for this play relies very little upon flashy backdrops and a multitude of characters, and more so upon the mood that the

  • Abolition Of Man

    835 Words  | 2 Pages

    nothingness. Simply put, it is his claim that to destroy, or even fundamentally change, man’s basic value system is to destroy man himself. Lewis states late in the book that, “They are not men at all. Stepping outside the Tao, they have stepped into the void(64).” The empty “they” that Lewis is referring to those that would seek to move beyond the Tao. Acceptance in the belief that the Tao is the rational contents of everyman, which Lewis asserts openly in the text, is to say that he has moved beyond all

  • The Growth of Janie in Their Eyes Were Watching God

    2959 Words  | 6 Pages

    understanding of the basic human aspect that causes us to fear emptiness. Janie, the main character in the novel, understands this emptiness and is dissatisfied with it. In an attempt to solve the problem, Janie sets out on a quest to make sense of her inner void. Although she is beset on all sides by tragedy, Janie does not become discouraged - quite the opposite actually. She uses her tragedy as emotional fuel to keep her moving toward her destiny. Although Janie is alone at the end of the novel, she realizes

  • Video Games: I Hate Loving Them

    1754 Words  | 4 Pages

    Entertainment System as a child. I was quite young, and I had accompanied my mother and sisters to visit my mother’s family in Ohio. Their town was quite small, and being used to the constant distraction of the city, I found the whole situation to be rather void of entertainment. This was until I was invited to the neighbor’s house, where lived a young boy about my age. I was led to his room, where I discovered something that appeared to be quite magical. Sitting on the edge of his bed, a few feet from

  • Portrayal of Utopia in The Tempest

    1667 Words  | 4 Pages

    remain stagnant, it is a constant changing process depending on one’s life experiences and points of view. More specifically Prospero's utopia is a reflection of  what society at that time believed to be a utopia. This being an easy existence, void of manual labor, with all of their time spent on the pursuit of greater knowledge and... ... middle of paper ... ...wn nature.  He says ‘ All torment, trouble, wonder and amazement/Inhabits here.  Some heavenly power guide us/Out of this fearful

  • The Charismatic Hitler

    840 Words  | 2 Pages

    territory, Hitler was able to convince Germans that following him would provide a life of comfort and security. Hitler had a charismatic personality with a decisiveness and power not found in his political opponents. In an essentially political void, Hitler provided "...the appeal of a strong nationalistic figure" (Soldwedel). Hitler was promising a new elite national Germany that would be a leading world power; a world power that was denied Germany in World War I. The German population felt

  • Exposing the Role of Women in The Madwoman in the Attic

    1698 Words  | 4 Pages

    lives, embodying the ideals of the “Eternal Feminine” vision in Goethe’s Faust. Passivity led to a belief that women were more spiritual than men, meant to contemplate rather than act. “It is just because women are defined as wholly passive, completely void of generative power that they become numinous to male artists,” they write on page 599. It was this celestial quality that separated them from earthly men capable of lives of action, and thus, capable of handling the pen. Lives without action, of course