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Mill - Search Results
1.
Mini Mills: Steel :
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
A 5 page paper that explains and describes mini mills, a domestic competitor of integrated steel mills. A table illustrates the major differences between the integrated mills and the mini mills. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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2.
Huxley's 'Brave New World' vs. Mill's 'On Liberty'
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
A 5 page essay which attempts to see the world depicted in Aldus Huxley's 'Brave New World' through the eyes of John Stuart Mill based upon his work entitled 'On Liberty.' For Mill, what has been lost in Huxley's utopia is individual freedom and expression. Mill argued that the danger of society is that the majority denies liberty to individuals, whether explicitly through laws, which he calls, 'acts of public authority,' or more subtly through morals and social pressure, which Mill calls 'collective opinion.' The writer of this essay believes that upon entering the brave new world, Mill would criticize it harshly for having denied liberty through both of these methods.
Paper Keywords -
smill
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3.
political freedom within a society by John Locke, John Stuart Mill, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau
4 Pages, 2021 Words, 23 $ (USD)
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4.
The Sociological Views of C. Wright Mills
(14 Pages, 167.3 $ (USD) )
14 pages in length. C. Wright Mills is well remembered for his popular work The Sociological Imagination, in which he set forth his views on how social science should be pursued. In his book, Mills calls for a humanist sociology. By this he meant a sociology that connects the social, personal, and historical dimensions of our lives. The sociological imagination Mills speaks of is one that a way of looking at the world that can see links between the so-called private problems of the individual versus the important social issues. Bibliography lists 12 sources.
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5.
Paper and Pulp Mills: Impacts to Public Health and the Environment
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
A 5 page contention that pulp and paper mills are a double-edged sword for some of the areas of the nation where they are located. On the one hand, they provide much-needed jobs and infrastructural development. On the other hand, the industrial process utilized by these mills can be harmful to both people and the environment. This paper reviews some of the pollutants that are associated with these mills and the impacts they can have on public health and the environment. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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6.
Unions And The Steel Mills
(6 Pages, 71.7 $ (USD) )
A 6 page research paper analyzes the present relationship between steel mills and unions in the United States. A Literature Review is included that analyzes and details the current trends and technology within the steel industry in respect to union activity. Within this relationship, the subtopic of steel industry trends and the development of integrated steel mills and 'mini' steel mills, or minimills, is also presented. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
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7.
John Stuart Mill's Utilitarianism / Equality And Impartiality In Chapter V
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
A 5 page paper discussing the ending paragraphs of the work. Though Mills says that happiness is measurable and therefore useful for determining the state of equality between individuals, he does not specify how that measurement should be made. He shows that utilitarianism does not hold that all people are equal, for there clearly are instances in which they are not. That Mills takes such care to explain inequalities indicates that utilitarianism does not in itself either imply or guarantee equality among all, but it is, according to Mills, the basis of morality in that it leads to justice and to right actions. No additional sources cited.
Paper Keywords -
smill
,
tariuti
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8.
John Stuart Mill's "On Liberty" – What Is The Goal Of Political Society?
(3 Pages, 35.85 $ (USD) )
3 pages in length. Mill fit into the general history of political, economic and social thought by applying his interpretation of society and the utilitarian philosophies by which it should abide. The concept of utilitarianism speaks well to the stance of political society Mill supported. When assessing this concept, it is important to consider how utilitarianism represents the quest to serve the greater good rather than what is favorable for the individual; indeed, this has a great deal to do with the idea of sacrificing a lesser being for the better of the superior being. With that in mind, one can easily see how Mill's reaction to the growing impasse between majority rule and individualism is meant to cause is one that supports the protection of society as a whole. At the same time, however, Mill espoused the need to break free of dictatorial rule, instead imparting the masses with democratic command as a means by which to deter what he termed "the tyranny of the majority." Bibliography lists 1 source.
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9.
Theda Skocpol’s Use of Mill’s Methods of Agreement and Difference in Her Studies in Social Revolution: Examples of Methods Applied and Lieberson’s Critique
(6 Pages, 71.7 $ (USD) )
This is a 6 page paper discussing Skocpol’s use of Mill’s methods of agreement and difference in her studies of social revolutions. In Theda Skocpol’s “States and Social Revolutions: A Comparative Analysis of France, Russia and China”, she uses John Stuart Mills’ methods of agreement and difference to appropriate logical causes of social revolutions in her comparative historical analyses. Stanley Lieberson, on the other hand, disagreed with Skocpol’s application of Mill’s methods when applied to small-N situations in sociological inquiry and this application of Mill by Skocpol “does not allow for probabilistic theories, interaction effects, measurement errors, or even the presence of more than one cause”. Despite this argument, most social researchers, including Skocpol agree that Mill’s methods can be used in social comparative research as long as the causes discussed are only generalized to those cases studied. In Skocpol’s study, the cause of social revolutions in France, Russia and China were based largely on the organized peasant revolts and the breakdown of the monarchical state administrations. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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10.
Chapter IV in “Utilitarianism” by John Stuart Mill
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
This is a 5 page paper discussing the argument presented by Mill in Chapter 4 of “Utilitarianism” (1863). John Stuart Mill was raised on the utilitarian principles indoctrinated by his father James which are based largely on people’s actions are the result of their desire for ultimate happiness and all actions are elements of this happiness or a means to attain it. In Mill’s Chapter IV of “Utilitarianism” (1863), he attempts to prove this system of utility based on the principle of desire for ultimate happiness. To do this, he uses an indirect method of proof and in accepting his argument the reader must accept the basis of utilitarianism in order to extrapolate his principle to include the elements of will and virtue; elements many philosophers believe are not conscious acts of desire but remain unconscious in their design. Mill believes that will and virtue along with other elements such as money, power and fame are all originally based on the desire for general happiness and are therefore included. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
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