Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Plato’s Cave Allegory: My interpretation


One application could be when people thought the sun went around the earth instead of the other way around, like we know today. The “cave” would be the people that believe that they are better than others, and the general population would be the “prisoners”. The idea that everything in the solar system goes around the earth are the “shadows and voices”, and people wanting to believe that they are better than others are the “shackles”.
                 
The escapee is Galileo Galilei and he finds that the sun doesn’t go around the earth, that in fact it is the other way around! (This, by the way, is called “heliocentrism”). Galileo tries to spread his discoveries (he is now rescuing the prisoners) of how the earth moves around a stationary sun, instead of the other way around. However, the “prisoners” don’t believe Galileo when he tells them of this crazy idea of the earth going around the sun, instead of the other way around?
               
Eventually, the “prisoners” escape because they finally come out of denial and see the logic in the “real world”. Galileo keeps trying to convince the “prisoners” but they keep refusing to believe him until he dies. However, even then, it takes them a really long time to realize that Galileo was right, and the “real world” actually exists.

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Heros


To me, a hero is a person who performs the tasks they are required to do and beyond. A hero is a person who tries their hardest at what they are doing and does it because they want to help people. A hero is the person who does something for the benefit of others, not thinking about what will happen to themselves, only to the people around them. A hero is a person who gives hope in times where there is none. A hero is a person people turn to in times of need. This is a person who is a hero in my eyes.
                
A great example of this would be Mary Donnelly. I heard about her a few weeks ago on a news show called Sunday Morning, and I think she is the greatest example of a hero. She is 83 and lives on Block Island, off the coast of Rhode Island. Mary Donnelly is a nurse. What makes her a hero is that she goes directly to peoples’ houses to treat them. In the story they were doing, she picked up a stranded mother with an 8 day old baby to get them to the baby’s check-up. That is doing her job beyond the limits, helping people because she wants to. You can tell she does this for the good of people and not for herself because of the fact that she has been doing this for half a century.  Not only does she care to the physical ailments of the residents on Block Island, but their financial ones too. She is the person people go to when they are in the hole. She pays peoples bills, from college tuition to oil bills. Mary Donnelly is a true hero.

Friday, November 04, 2011

The Nile: How it Shaped Ancient Egypt


What would you do if you were thirsty? You would take a drink from your water bottle, right? However, what if you lived in Ancient Egypt? They didn’t have water bottles and couldn’t just turn on the tap. Ancient Egyptians did not have the technology we have today to perform simple tasks we consider easy, such as transporting heavy blocks for building. They couldn’t just turn a key to start a truck to transport a 2 ton block hundreds of miles. So,  you may be wondering, what did they do? Push the block? Tie a rope to it and pull the block? Of course not! They floated them down the Nile River in boats, but before we get any deeper, you need to know some background. Ancient Egypt started in 2920 BCE, when the first pharaohs united Upper and Lower Egypt into the powerful kingdom of Egypt, and ended in 30 BCE, when the Romans conquered the kingdom. Running right through Egypt was, and still does, the mighty Nile River in all of its 4,184 miles of glory, influencing the kingdom of Egypt in every way imaginable. Egypt’s cities were all along the Nile. Egyptians had three seasons, Akhet (flood season), Peret (planting and growing season), and Shemu (harvest season), all based on the flooding patterns of the Nile. To the north of Egypt, there was the Mediterranean Sea. To the east of Egypt was the Eastern Desert. To the west of Egypt was the Western Desert. The Egyptians were pretty closed off, so how did they survive? The Nile, of course! The Nile was an oasis in the desert for the people of Egypt. Now that you know the basics, let’s take the time to answer our real question. There is no doubt the Nile shaped Ancient Egypt, but in what ways? The next paragraphs will talk about how the Nile impacted worship, workforce, and trade and transportation. Let’s begin!
                
One of the things the Nile shaped in Ancient Egypt was how they worshipped. This was shown in the song “Hymn to the Nile” where it states, “Hail to you, oh Nile…who produces barley and makes wheat grow… if he is sluggish, noses suffocate, everyone is impoverished… If he rises, the land is in exultation, and everyone is in joy.” which, to my understanding, means the Nile lets food grow, and if it wasn’t there, people would die and everyone who did not would be extremely poor, and if it flooded just right, everyone would be happy and the land rich(Doc E). This shows how much they worshipped the Nile because, if the Nile flooded just a little too much, or just a little too little, their lives would be thrown in poverty. That’s a good reason to worship, right? This was also shown in their calendar where it says, “Akhet (flood season) June-Mid October: Fields in the Nile floodplain covered in water and fertilized by a new batch of silt.”, which said that the fields were flooded, so farmers didn’t have much to do(Doc B). No work=more time to worship, right? Again, the Nile’s flooding pattern affects people’s worship. Yet another example lies in a tomb painting from the tomb of a tradesman named Sennedjem (Doc D). The added note states “The afterlife of Ancient Egypt was a paradise called the Field of Reeds, shown in this tomb painting.”, so the people of Ancient Egypt worship gods so they could get into the Field of Reeds. The painting shows several boats, plants, and irrigation canals, all of which needs the Nile to work, or live. In addition, the borders show the Nile filling the irrigation canals. Even the things they worship to “live” in, so to speak, after death, they cannot escape the Nile.
                
Another one of the things the Nile shaped in Ancient Egypt was their workforce. This was shown in the illustration by Oliver Frey showing boats in the Nile (Doc C). This picture alone shows at least 5 occupations that rely pretty heavily on the Nile, such as farmer, rower, boat builders, cloth makers, and rope makers. This was also shown in the calendar, which has each of the 3 flood-based seasons (Doc B). Notice that each one determines what farmers will do during that time. Remember, farmers made up 95% of the population of Ancient Egypt. Once again, the Nile manages to shape 95% of the population of Ancient Egypt.
                
The 3rd thing that the Nile shaped in Ancient Egypt was transportation and trade. Do you know how Egyptians got stones from hundreds of miles away from Giza to Giza to build the Great Pyramids? Do you know how Hatshepsut’s first trading phenomenon to Punt was accomplished? (Journey Across Time). By the Nile, of course! This was shown in the map of Ancient Egypt (Doc A). As you can see, the Nile Delta flows into the Mediterranean Sea, a perfect trading route to foreign countries. Another example is the illustration by Oliver Frey showing boats transporting goods to other locations (Doc C). One boat is carrying an obelisk, another a casket. They are carrying things in days what it might take weeks or months to carry on foot. Remember, these obelisks could weigh up to 2 or more tons!
                
Nothing in Ancient Egypt could avoid the Nile, not even their imagination, work, or even death. The Nile shaped just about everything in Ancient Egypt, and I think the most important were worship, trade and transportation, and workforce. However, other river civilizations did not work the same way with the same strong bond. For example, the Tigris and Euphrates of Mesopotamia’s floods were unpredictable and sometimes did more damage than good and did not affect Mesopotamia’s religion in the same way. The Nile also provided more natural defenses, such as the cataracts and waterfalls protecting Egypt from foreign attacks and eventually led to Egypt’s rise. The Nile is quite literally the “backbone” of Egypt, both geographically and politically.