Monday, January 26, 2015

Definition vs. Explanation

What was most interesting about what we read in chapter 2 of our text book was the idea of definition vs. explanation. I had never really thought about the difference between the two, but as I think about it the two really are different. I used to think about a definition as an explanation of something, but a definition really just defines the guidelines. An explanation is a lot more broad than a definition, it allows for more creativity when describing the word. It's really cool how different the two things are when I thought they were so similar before.

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Greed or Opportunity?


Wealth... We think about wealth all of the time, but usually when we think about it we think about it in terms of money. Money is as important today as food and water... or even air. Money gives us stability, it gives us status, it gives us everything from our necessities to our biggest wants. Money makes us do things (good and bad).


Last week in class we had a couple of presentations, one about free speech and the other was about wealth. So, after class I started thinking about wealth and what it is, but most importantly what it does. I began to google some stuff about wealth and came upon this question: Does wealth make people less ethical? 

I did some research on this question that I stumbled upon and found out that wealth really does make us do unethical things, whether it's cheating to win a prize, cutting off another motorist, or lying in a negotiation. So, why does money make people decide to do unethical things? The answer is greed. 

In all of the articles and studies I have read, the common thread was greed. Greed makes people feel like it is okay to literally take candy from babies. Greed is a huge factor in many unethical choices made by the wealthy. 

In all honesty, I was pretty surprised by the outcome of these experiments. I'd never had anything against wealthy people (and I still don't), so I decided to do some more research... The research I did after that was to find out if wealthy people make more unethical decisions than less wealthy people, and the outcome was just as surprising. In every single article about rich and poor people's ethics, the outcome was the same, if given the opportunity both sides would do the unethical things as long as it got them ahead. 

In the end, I have learned that all people make unethical decisions regardless of their social standing, and it left me with this final question: Are we all innately unethical?

Saturday, January 17, 2015

Aspasia

For my writing class we get the pleasure of reading a very different kind of text book. Most text books are very dry and are essentially just a list of a bunch of facts, this text book reads like somebody talking to you. The first chapter discusses many commonly heard names of scholars such as Pericles and and Socrates, but there was one name that had been completely unheard of to me and that was Aspasia.
Aspasia was a great teacher of rhetoric far beyond her years. But what was most interesting to me is that she actually opened a school of rhetoric and philosophy where she offered higher education to women! The classes were attended by many upper class women and men like Socrates. All in all, Aspasia was far before her time.