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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Aaron Stanoch

Aaron Stanoch

Sylvia Plath 50 Years Later: What Modern Feminism Can Learn From Ariel | Anis... - 0 views

  • Sylvia Plath, who died 50 years ago this week, founded a style of feminist poetry that has almost completely receded.
Aaron Stanoch

THE INFLUENCE OF NATHANIEL HAWTHORNES THE SCARLET LETTER ON SYLVIA PLATH'S ...: EBSCOhost - 0 views

  • "The Scarlet Letter," and with short stories including "Rappaccini's Daughter." The poem's bitter evocation of a dysfunctional, violent, but nevertheless deeply seductive relation- ship between daughter, father-figure, and husband.
Aaron Stanoch

`Daddy I have had to kill you,': Plath, rage, and the modern elegy: EBSCOhost - 0 views

  • Discusses Sylvia Plath's contribution to the development of the elegy in the twentieth century. Series of poems mourning her father's death; Aggression of the mourner over death; Poems from consolatory mourning to the violent, contradictory, and protracted work of melancholia.
Aaron Stanoch

Moore, Plath, Hughes, and "The Literary Life": EBSCOhost - 0 views

  • Examines "Birthday Letters," the thirty-third poem in Ted Hughes' "The Literary Life" to shed light on the relationships among himself and fellow authors Marianne Moore and Sylvia Plath. Missing letter described in the poem which complicates previous accounts of the fate of Plath's missing journals; Examination of the letter from Moore to Plath and other previously unpublished letters by Moore which reveal fault lines in Hughes' account and in the gendered politics of mid-twentieth-century Anglo-American poetry.
Aaron Stanoch

AN ANALYSIS OF INTIMACY IN SYLVIA PLATH'S POETRY: EBSCOhost - 0 views

  • The present article aims to highlight one of the major characteristics of confessional poetry - that of exposure of intimate life and feelings through poetry. The interest in Sylvia Plath's poems is closely linked to that of her personal life, her marriage to Ted Hughes being one of them.
Aaron Stanoch

Tracking the Thought-Fox: Sylvia Plath's Revision of Ted Hughes: EBSCOhost - 0 views

  • Investigates the poetry of Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath. Influence on each other's poetic approach; Analysis of the ways in which Plath looted Hughes' poetic corpus; Interpretation of Hughes' poem entitled "Phaetons."
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Aaron Stanoch

"Full Fathom Five": The Dead Father in Sylvia Plath's Seascapes: EBSCOhost - 0 views

  • where Plath uses suicidal theme as a process of reunion with his father and the beach which arouses in her that suicidal desire.
Aaron Stanoch

The Father as Muse in Sylvia Plath's Poetry: EBSCOhost - 0 views

  • The article discusses the role of father figures in the poetry of poet Sylvia Plath. The author suggests Plath's father,
Aaron Stanoch

Sylvia Plath's Man in Black: EBSCOhost - 0 views

  • The male muse in the psychic territory Adrienne Rich called in 1971 'The Man' represents sexualized death and phallic mourning, a concept of masculinity marked by the legacy of the 20th century's two world wars.
Aaron Stanoch

The Vatican's View of Evolution: Pope Paul II and Pope Pius - 0 views

  • The Vatican's View of Evolution: The Story of Two Popes
  • H. L. Mencken expressed admiration for how Catholics handled the evolution issue: [The advantage of Catholics] lies in the simple fact that they do not have to decide either for Evolution or against it.  Authority has not spoken on the subject; hence it puts no burden upon conscience, and may be discussed realistically and without prejudice.  A certain wariness, of course, is necessary.  I say that authority has not spoken; it may, however, speak tomorrow, and so the prudent man remembers his step.  But in the meanwhile there is nothing to prevent him examining all available facts, and even offering arguments in support of them or against them—so long as those arguments are not presented as dogma.  (STJ, 163)
  • The Pope declared: The Teaching Authority of the Church does not forbid that, in conformity with the present state of human sciences and sacred theology, research and discussions, on the part of men experiences in both fields, take place with regard to the doctrine of evolution, in as far as it inquires into the origin of the human body as coming from pre-existent and living matter—for the Catholic faith obliges us to hold that souls are immediately created by God.
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  •   The document makes plain the pope’s fervent hope that evolution will prove to be a passing scientific fad, and it attacks those persons who “imprudently and indiscreetly hold that evolution …explains the origin of all things.”  Nonetheless, Pius XII states that nothing in Catholic doctrine is contradicted by a theory that suggests one specie might evolve into another—even if that specie is man
  • In other words, the Pope could live with evolution, so long as the process of “ensouling” humans was left to God.
  • ope really said, “the theory evolution is more than one hypothesis,” not “the theory of evolution is more than a hypothesis.”  If that were so, the Pope might have been suggesting that there are multiple theories of evolution, and all of them might be wrong.
  •   Perhaps, some creationists argued, the p
Aaron Stanoch

Early Theories of Evolution: Darwin and Natural Selection - 0 views

  • Most educated people in Europe and the Americas during the 19th century had their first full exposure to the concept of evolution through the writings of Charles Darwin
  • the idea of evolution had been strongly associated with radical scientific and political views coming out of post-revolutionary France
  • He became very interested in the scientific ideas of the geologist Adam Sedgwick and the naturalist John Henslow with whom he spent considerable time collecting specimens from the countryside around the university
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  •   Especially important was his 5 weeks long visit to the Galápagos Islands in the Eastern Pacific Ocean.  It was there that he made the observations that eventually led him to comprehend what causes plants and animals to evolve, but he apparently did not clearly formulate his views on this until 1837.
  • Darwin was struck by the fact that the birds were slightly different from one island to another.
  • He realized that the key to why this difference existed was connected with the fact that the various species live in different kinds of environments.
  • On returning to England, Darwin and an ornithologist associate identified 13 species of finches that he had collected on the Galápagos Islands.  This was puzzling since he knew of only one species of this bird on the mainland of South America, nearly 600 miles to the east, where they had all presumably originated.  He observed that the Galápagos species differed from each other in beak size and shape.  He also noted that the beak varieties were associated with diets based on different foods.  He concluded that when the original South American finches reached the islands, they dispersed to different environments where they had to adapt to different conditions.  Over many generations, they changed anatomically in ways that allowed them to get enough food and survive to reproduce.  This observation was verified by intensive field research in the last quarter of the 20th century.
  • Those individuals having a variation that gives them an advantage in staying alive long enough to successfully reproduce are the ones that pass on their traits more frequently to the next generation.  Subsequently, their traits become more common and the population evolves.  Darwin called this "descent with modification."
  • An example of evolution resulting from natural selection was discovered among "peppered" moths living near English industrial cities.  These insects have varieties that vary in wing and body coloration from light to dark.  During the 19th century, sooty smoke from coal burning furnaces killed the lichen on trees and darkened the bark.  When moths landed on these trees and other blackened surfaces, the dark colored ones were harder to spot by birds who ate them and, subsequently, they more often lived long enough to reproduce.  Over generations, the environment continued to favor darker moths.  As a result, they progressively became more common.  By 1895, 98% of the moths in the vicinity of English cities like Manchester were mostly black.  Since the 1950's, air pollution controls have significantly reduced the amount of heavy particulate air pollutants reaching the trees, buildings, and other objects in the environment.   As a result, lichen has grown back, making trees lighter in color.  In addition, once blackened buildings were cleaned making them lighter in color.  Now, natural selection favors lighter moth varieties so they have become the most common.  This trend has been well documented by field studies undertaken between 1959 and 1995 by Sir Cyril Clarke from the University of Liverpool.  The same pattern of moth wing color evolutionary change in response to increased and later decreased air pollution has been carefully documented by other researchers for the countryside around Detroit, Michigan.  While it is abundantly clear that there has been an evolution in peppered moth coloration due to the advantage of camouflage over the last two centuries, it is important to keep in mind that this story of natural selection in action is incomplete.  There may have been additional natural selection factors involved.
  • The Galápagos finches provide an excellent example of this process.  Among the birds that ended up in arid environments, the ones with beaks better suited for eating cactus got more food.  As a result, they were in better condition to mate.  Similarly, those with beak shapes that were better suited to getting nectar from flowers or eating hard seeds in other environments were at an advantage there.  In a very real sense, nature selected the best adapted varieties to survive and to reproduce.  This process has come to be known as natural selection.
  • evolution occurs as a result of natural selection implied that chance plays a major role
  • He understood that it is a matter of luck whether any individuals in a population have variations that will allow them to survive and reproduce.  If no such variations exist, the population rapidly goes extinct because it cannot adapt to a changing environment
  • It was not until he was 50 years old, in 1859, that Darwin finally published his theory of evolution in full for his fellow scientists and for the public at large.  He did so in a 490 page book entitled On the Origin of Species
  • If natural selection were the only process occurring, each generation should have less variation until all members of a population are essentially identical, or clones of each other.  That does not happen.  Each new generation has new variations
Aaron Stanoch

Actionbioscience | Natural Selection: How Evolution Works - 0 views

  • Some take natural selection to mean survival of the fittest. How does this slogan sometimes lead to misconceptions? Futuyma: “Survival of the fittest” is a slogan that is really very misleading. First of all, it’s not an adequate description of what really goes on in nature for two reasons:
  • Sometimes there isn’t a “fittest” type. There may be several different types that are equally fit for different reasons. Perhaps they’re adapted to different facets of the environment. One is not going to replace the other because each has its proper place in the environment. Moreover, it’s not just a matter of survival. Natural selection is a difference in reproductive success that involves both the ability to survive until reproductive age and then the capacity to reproduce.
Aaron Stanoch

Darwin's Theory Of Evolution - 1 views

  • Darwin's Theory of Evolution - The Premise
  • Darwin's Theory of Evolution - Natural Selection
  • arwin's Theory of Evolution - A Theory In Crisis
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  • Darwin's Theory of Evolution - Slowly But Surely...
  • a plausible mechanism called "natural selection." Natural selection acts to preserve and accumulate minor advantageous genetic mutations
  • Suppose a member of a species developed a functional advantage (it grew wings and learned to fly). Its offspring would inherit that advantage and pass it on to their offspring. The inferior (disadvantaged) members of the same species would gradually die out, leaving only the superior (advantaged) members of the species.
  • [1] Thus, Darwin conceded that, "If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed, which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down." [2] Such a complex organ would be known as an "irreducibly complex system". An irreducibly complex system is one composed of multiple parts, all of which are necessary for the system to function. If even one part is missing, the entire system will fail to function. Every individual part is integral. [3] Thus, such a system could not have evolved slowly, piece by piece. The common mousetrap is an everyday non-biological example of irreducible complexity. It is composed of five basic parts: a catch (to hold the bait), a powerful spring, a thin rod called "the hammer," a holding bar to secure the hammer in place, and a platform to mount the trap. If any one of these parts is missing, the mechanism will not work. Each individual part is integral. The mousetrap is irreducibly complex.
  • Darwin's Theory of Evolution is the widely held notion that all life is related and has descended from a common ancestor:
  • Ancient Greek philosophers such as Anaximander postulated the development of life from non-life and the evolutionary descent of man from animal.
Aaron Stanoch

Darwin Online: Darwin's field notes on the Galapagos: 'A little world within itself' - 1 views

  • Darwin's field notes on the Galapagos: 'A little world within itself'
Aaron Stanoch

Evolution vs Religion - 5 Reasons Why They Can Coexist - 2 views

  • Evolution vs Religion – 5 Reasons Why They Can Coexist
Aaron Stanoch

Evolution and Religion Can Coexist, Scientists Say - 2 views

  • "Science without religion is lame; religion without science is blind." —Albert Einstein
  • "Science without religion is lame; religion without science is blind." —Albert Einstein
  • . "This story does not contradict God, but instead enlarges [the idea of] God."
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  • . Today many scientists say there is no conflict between their faith and their work.
  • One would be hard pressed to find a legitimate scientist today who does not believe in evolution
  • Many scientists—and theologians—maintain that it would be perfectly logical to think that a divine being used evolution as a method to create the world.
Aaron Stanoch

Evolution and Religion Can Coexist, Scientists Say - 2 views

  • "For example, in the Bible, Noah takes two animals and puts them on the Ark. But in a later section, he takes seven pairs of animals. If this is the literal word of God, was God confused when He wrote it?"
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