Analysis of essays, articles and edits - PaGaLGuY.com - The Everything of MBA in India and Abroad, CAT 2009, GMAT, XAT, MAT
PaGaLGuY.com - The Everything of MBA in India and Abroad, CAT 2009, GMAT, XAT, MAT
Forum Rules
» Sponsors
  PaGaLGuY.com - The Everything of MBA in India and Abroad, CAT 2009, GMAT, XAT, MAT > Exam Resources > English Resources
Analysis of essays, articles and edits
English Resources Drop in with your Reading Comprehension, Verbal Ability, Logic and related queries.

Tags: , , ,

» Post Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  (#1)
archbishop archbishop is offline
has no status.
Expert PaGaL
 
archbishop's Avatar
 
Posts: 115
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: MUMBAI
Age: 24
Groans: 0
Groaned at 3 Times in 3 Posts
Thanks: 1
Thanked 25 Times in 13 Posts
Analysis of essays, articles and edits - 10-06-2006, 10:27 AM

This thread is born out of the desire to cover all the topics in the RC section. Analysing edits is a gr8 way to build up your vocab and comprehension but somewhere i find them inadequate in covering all the topics required. Hence people having similar thoughts can use this thread to post their analyses of just anythig they think is relevant for RC in CAT.

The people who post here may paste the links of the articles or paste the article itself. Secondly please mention the topic or the subject areas covered. Some of the relevant topics seen in past CAT's are:

1. Psychology
2. Economics
3. History
4. Indian Politics
5. World Politics
6. Art, Culture & Music
7. Physical Sciences
8. Bio Medical Sciences
9. Environment
10. Language
11. Literature
12. Sociology & Anthropology
13. Religion & spirituality
14. Philosophy
15. Geography
16. Management

This is a broad list almost covering everything but CAT is an unpredictable event and more topics are encouraged. Just specify the topic at the beginning of the analysis.

The analysis can even be enriched by mentioning the tone, scope and the purpose.

Here are some sources for finding the essays and articles (this is the list elaborated by Munira Lokhandwala :

Science
http://www.firstscience.com/site/archive.asp
http://www.sciam.com/
http://www.sciencedaily.com/



Religion/Mythology
http://www.buzzle.com/chapters/archives-238.asp
http://www.religion-online.org/



Philosophy
http://www.essortment.com/in/Philosophy.General/index.htm
http://www.prs-ltsn.leeds.ac.uk/philosophy/articles/index.html



Psychology
http://www.uncommon-knowledge.co.uk/psychology.html
http://www.articlesfactory.com/articles/psychology.html



Sociology
http://soc.sagepub.com/reports/mfr1.dtl
http://www.aboutsociology.com/sociology/List_of_sociology_topics



Literature
http://www.essortment.com/in/Literature.General/index.htm
http://www.buzzle.com/chapters/archives-251.asp


History
http://www.historynet.com/
http://www.essortment.com/in/History.Events/index.htm



Politics
http://www.magportal.com/c/soc/intl/
http://www.buzzle.com/chapters/archives-234.asp


Geography
http://geography.about.com/cs/a.htm
http://www.ezgeography.com/


Economics
http://economics.about.com/cs/a.htm
http://www.europe-economics.com/pubs/articles.htm


Management
http://www.magportal.com/c/bus/strat/
http://www.see.ed.ac.uk/~gerard/Management/


So get going guys...............



A computer beat me at chess once.
But, it was no match for me at kick boxing.

Last edited by archbishop; 10-06-2006 at 10:31 AM.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usStumble this Post!
» Quote
The Following User Says Thank You to archbishop For This Useful Post:
empyrean (07-05-2007)
Sponsored Links
  (#2)
archbishop archbishop is offline
has no status.
Expert PaGaL
 
archbishop's Avatar
 
Posts: 115
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: MUMBAI
Age: 24
Groans: 0
Groaned at 3 Times in 3 Posts
Thanks: 1
Thanked 25 Times in 13 Posts
Re: Analysis of essays, articles and edits - 10-06-2006, 10:46 AM

For starterz lets analyse this article from the following link:

http://economics.about.com/cs/neocla...e_of_money.htm

Here's the article...........

Q: Why does money have value?

A: Money doesn't have any inherent value. It is simply pieces of paper or numbers in a ledger. A car has value because it can help you get where you need to go. Water has a value because it has a use; if you don’t drink enough of it you will die. Unless you enjoy looking at pictures of deceased national heroes, money has no more use than any other piece of paper.
It didn't always work this way. In the past money was in the form of coins, generally composed of precious metals such as gold and silver. The value of the coins was roughly based on the value of the metals they contained, because you could always melt the coins down and use the metal for other purposes. Until a few decades ago paper money in different countries was based on the gold standard or silver standard or some combination of the two. This meant that you could take some paper money to the government, who would exchange it for some gold or some silver based on an exchange rate set by the government. The gold standard lasted until 1971 when President Nixon announced that the United States would no longer exchange dollars for gold. This ended the Bretton Woods system, which will be the focus of a future article. Now the United States is on a system of fiat money, which is not tied to any other commodity. So these pieces of paper in your pocket are nothing but pieces of paper.

The Value of Money

So why does a five-dollar bill have value and some other pieces of paper do not? It’s simple: Money is a good with a limited supply and there is a demand for it because people want it. The reason I want money is because I know other people want money, so I can use my money to others to get goods and services from them in return. They can then use that money to purchase goods and services that they want. Goods and services are what ultimately matter in the economy, and money is a way that allows people to give up goods and services which are less desirable to them, and get ones that are more so. People sell their labor (work) to acquire money now to purchase goods and services in the future. If I believe that money will have a value in the future, I will work towards acquiring some. Our system of money operates on a mutual set of beliefs; so long as enough of us believe in the future value of money the system will work.What could cause us to lose that belief? It is unlikely that money will be replaced in the near future, because the inefficiencies of a dual coincidence of wants system are well known. If one currency is to be replaced by another, there will be a period in which you can switch your old currency for new currency. This is what happened in Europe when countries switched over to the Euro. So our currencies are not going to disappear.
Then why else might we think that our money might not be of value to others in the future? Well, what if we believed our money wouldn’t be nearly as valuable in the future as it is today? This inflation of the currency causes people to want to get rid of their money as quickly as possible. Inflation, and the rational way citizens react to it, causes great misery for an economy. People will not sign into profitable deals which involve future payments because they’ll be unsure what the value of money will be when they get paid. Business activity sharply declines because of this. Inflation causes all sorts of other inefficiencies, from the café changing its prices every few minutes, to the homemaker taking a wheelbarrow full of money to the bakery in order to buy a loaf of bread.The belief in money and the steady value of the currency are not innocuous things. If citizens lose faith in the money supply and believe that money will be worth less in the future economic activity can grind to a halt. Money is essentially a good, so as such is ruled by the axioms of supply and demand. The value of any good is determined by its supply and demand and the supply and demand for other goods in the economy. A price for any good is the amount of money it takes to get that good. Inflation occurs when the price of goods increases; in other words when money becomes less valuable relative to those other goods. This can occur when:
  1. The supply of money goes up.
  2. The supply of other goods goes down.
  3. Demand for money goes down.
  4. Demand for other goods goes up.
The key cause of inflation is increases in the supply of money. Inflation can occur for other reasons. If a natural disaster destroyed stores but left banks intact, we’d expect to see an immediate rise in prices, as goods are now scarce relative to money. These kinds of situations are rare. For the most part inflation is caused when the money supply rises faster than the supply of other goods and services.
So to answer your question, money has value because people believe that they will be able to exchange their money for goods and services in the future. This belief will persist so long as people do not fear future inflation. To avoid inflation, the government must ensure that the money supply does not increase too quickly.



A computer beat me at chess once.
But, it was no match for me at kick boxing.

Last edited by archbishop; 10-06-2006 at 10:49 AM.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usStumble this Post!
» Quote
The Following User Says NO Thank You to archbishop For This Un-useful Post:
shreshth (04-09-2007)
The Following User Says Thank You to archbishop For This Useful Post:
mail.saiyam (24-06-2009)
  (#3)
archbishop archbishop is offline
has no status.
Expert PaGaL
 
archbishop's Avatar
 
Posts: 115
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: MUMBAI
Age: 24
Groans: 0
Groaned at 3 Times in 3 Posts
Thanks: 1
Thanked 25 Times in 13 Posts
Re: Analysis of essays, articles and edits - 10-06-2006, 10:57 AM

Subject: Economics

This is a good article to describe the fundamentals on the usage of money. The writer goes on to describe how naive it is of us to give so much value to pieces of paper. He further states that money has value because we know that it has demand and has a limited supply ........facets essential for any commodity to have value. Money has demand not because we want money per se .......it is because it acts as a facilitator to satisfy our demands.
The writer drifts away from the topic to cover inflation which is a value killer for money. He states its disastrous consequences and the inefficiencies it brings.
The article is a good read. The tone sounds to be informative. The language is pretty facile.

Additional comments are encouraged........



A computer beat me at chess once.
But, it was no match for me at kick boxing.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usStumble this Post!
» Quote
The Following User Says Thank You to archbishop For This Useful Post:
SONATA (21-03-2007)
  (#4)
archbishop archbishop is offline
has no status.
Expert PaGaL
 
archbishop's Avatar
 
Posts: 115
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: MUMBAI
Age: 24
Groans: 0
Groaned at 3 Times in 3 Posts
Thanks: 1
Thanked 25 Times in 13 Posts
Re: Analysis of essays, articles and edits - 12-06-2006, 12:27 PM

hey guyz neone interested in this?........get some more sources if u have it guys. Wikipedia has some gr8 articles.....hope 2 c more from that site.......



A computer beat me at chess once.
But, it was no match for me at kick boxing.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usStumble this Post!
» Quote
  (#5)
archbishop archbishop is offline
has no status.
Expert PaGaL
 
archbishop's Avatar
 
Posts: 115
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: MUMBAI
Age: 24
Groans: 0
Groaned at 3 Times in 3 Posts
Thanks: 1
Thanked 25 Times in 13 Posts
Re: Analysis of essays, articles and edits - 12-06-2006, 01:35 PM

Like other Western philosophers, Machiavelli was influenced by the early Greek philosophers, especially Plato. However, in many cases Machiavelli seems to be arguing against Platonic philosophy. Plato believed in just rulers, who ruled via moral virtue. Machiavelli believed in "Virtu'", whatever was best for the State was Virtu'. In Plato's time, man served the state. According to Monarch notes on The Republic: The basic idea referred to is the view that ethics and politics are the same, or at least co-terminous (overlapping in essential features). There was no distinction between private life and public life, as there is today. There was no such concept as the "invasion of privacy," perhaps because no Athenian felt that he had a private life that was to be kept distinct from his public life.

However, in Machiavelli's time, as it is today, the States whole reason for being was to serve the citizens, not vice versa. Machiavelli believed the only purpose for a ruler was to make war, and protect its citizens from attacks by other states. The ruler, therefore, is justified in doing whatever is necessary to maintain the country, even if it is unjust. Plato argues a ruler can never be unjust.
Plato argues against the type of ruler, who rules solely by might in The Republic. The argument stands as a defense against Machiavellian society: In practicing a skill, we do not aim to go beyond, but only to hit the right point. Virtue is a kind of skill, and this requires a knowledge of what is the right measure. The unjust man, therefore, is not exercising much of a skill, is he? Nor is the tyrant doing much of a job at ruling. One cannot claim to play a higher F-sharp than anyone else - since we all know that F-sharp is F-sharp, and there cannot be higher or lower F-sharp's. It is the just man who knows the proper note; it is the unjust man who exceeds it and goes out of tune in his life. It is injustice, then, that is the fool's game. It destroys individuals, as it destroys states.(Plato, The Republic. 349E, P. 35-36)
In spite of the fact, Machiavelli is greatly influenced by the Greek and Latin classics, and by the bible, he takes a critical stance in dealing with the idea of morality. A Prince's main duty is the preservation of his country and the protection of his subjects. "A Prince, therefore should have no care or thought but for war, and the regulations and training it requires, and should apply himself exclusively to this as his peculiar province; for war is the sole art looked for in one who rules" (Machiavelli, P. 70). This is not far from what we look for in Republican societies. Machiavelli believes a good leader's main responsibility is to preserve his country first. According to Salmon: Machiavelli says that rulers should be truthful, keep promises, and the like when doing so will not harm the state, and that they should generally appear to have the traditional virtues. But since the goal of the ruler is to conquer and preserve the state, he should not shrink from wrongdoing when the preservation of the state requires this. Thus, the classical concept of civic virtue, which is a moral code applicable to rulers and subjects alike, is critically transformed in Machiavelli's concept of virtu', which pertains to rulers of states and can be at odds with moral virtue. (Salmon, Merrilee H, "Landmarks in Critical Thinking Series: Machiavelli's The Prince" )

Machiavelli's idea of virtu' is not of moral character then, but of what is best or the utilitarian needs of the country. For Machiavelli virtu' out weighs virtue in times of need while Plato believes a just ruler must behave the same all the time. Salmon says: Machiavelli critically analyzes the crucial characteristics of successful rulers, distinguishing, for example, between standards of discipline appropriate for military campaigns and for rulers when they are not commanding armies. Similarly, when Machiavelli discusses the concepts of cruelty and mercy, he presents examples to show that actions which might seem at first glance to be cruel are merciful in the circumstances, and vice versa.

Machiavelli is naive, and in many ways promotes violence, if it justifies the ends to a means, "virtu". However, in so doing, he also exposes Monarchy as a fraud, and offers a way of separating morality or religion from politics. Politics is a cruel game, and sometimes politicians must lie in order to ensure the utilitarian good. Machiavelli warns that total honesty is not always what a good Prince needs to hear, but is a type of flattery that should be shunned. He writes: For there is no way to guard against flattery but by letting it be seen that you take no offence in hearing the truth: but when every one is free to tell you the truth, respect falls short. Wherefore a prudent Prince should follow a middle course, by choosing certain discreet men from among his subjects, and allowing them alone free leave to speak their minds on any matter on which he asks their opinion, and on none other. But he ought to ask their opinion on everything, and after hearing what they have to say, should reflect and judge for himself. (Machiavelli, The Prince. The Rennaissance Man, Edited by Daniel Fader, Gorlier: New York P. 113)
Machiavelli greatly admires the works of Plato and other sophists.

Machiavelli employs the conditional patterns of argumentation developed by the Stoic logicians. He frequently uses the dilemma form since this is useful for presenting alternative courses of action along with their consequences. He skillfully avoids being caught in false dilemmas, however. For example, when considering whether it is better to be loved or feared, he first points out that it is desirable--though not easy--to be both loved and feared. Plato believed that the ruler without moral virtue was unjust. A true ruler was just regardless of the circumstances. By doing evil to those evil men, are we not adding to their evil, making them more evil? It follows that justice involves the actual creation of evil.
Yet no art can deliberately aim at a negative result. The death of a patient is not a triumph of medicine but a failure. The creation of evil is not an accomplishment of justice, but a failure of justice. (335 D, P. 15-16)
Therefore, according to Plato, a just ruler should not seek war, because war is unjust. War is evil, and "The creation of evil is not an accomplishment of justice, but a failure of justice." For Plato, a just ruler, an ideal ruler would be just. He does address war, and feels the Republic should have a standing Army of trained soldiers in order to defend the Republic. Machiavelli believes the state exists to make war, and a good ruler exists for only one purpose to make war, this is his only concern.

Machiavelli are writing in two different eras. In Plato's era, man based philosophy on utopian ideals and principles. They were concerned with how things should be, not how they were. If we all behave this way, we will have a perfect society.

Machiavelli, however, was a realist. He was concerned with how things were in reality, not how things could be if the world was perfect. He was greatly influenced by his failures in public life. He had served as head of the second chancery of the Florentine republic, but was dismissed after it fell in 1512. The Medici family was again ruling Florence, and a Medici also sat on the papal throne in Rome. The Prince was an attempt to prevent form those failures being repeated in the future. Machiavelli tried unsuccessfully to use this treatise to gain an advisory appointment either to the papacy or the court of the Duke. He was not concerned with moral virtue, if it meant the destruction and defeat of his state


The link: http://gaga.essortment.com/machiavelliplat_rqkz.htm



A computer beat me at chess once.
But, it was no match for me at kick boxing.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usStumble this Post!
» Quote
  (#6)
archbishop archbishop is offline
has no status.
Expert PaGaL
 
archbishop's Avatar
 
Posts: 115
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: MUMBAI
Age: 24
Groans: 0
Groaned at 3 Times in 3 Posts
Thanks: 1
Thanked 25 Times in 13 Posts
Re: Analysis of essays, articles and edits - 12-06-2006, 01:48 PM

Subject : Philosophy

The artcle speaks about the difference in the opinions of Machiavelli and Plato regarding the ruling of a nation.

Briefly put...Mac believed that the sole responsilbility of a ruler was to go at war....plato said that since wars are unjust and rulerz cant do unjust things, they cannot go to war.

Part of the difference in the opinion also came from the fact they lived in different eras

the critical diff. is that mac believed in a realistic soceity while plato in a perfect one. while today mac's philosophy holds wter......its a balanced that will serve the interest the most......



A computer beat me at chess once.
But, it was no match for me at kick boxing.

Last edited by archbishop; 13-06-2006 at 03:42 PM.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usStumble this Post!
» Quote
  (#7)
TintinAndSnowy TintinAndSnowy is offline
has no status.
Addicted PaGaL
IIM Calcutta

 
TintinAndSnowy's Avatar
 
Posts: 869
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: ANX 232 - IIM C
Groans: 47
Groaned at 29 Times in 19 Posts
Thanks: 2,242
Thanked 1,516 Times in 421 Posts
Re: Analysis of essays, articles and edits - 12-06-2006, 05:59 PM

Good job dude!

Let me take the printout and read it tonight .. will put my summary tomorrow ...
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usStumble this Post!
» Quote
  (#8)
archbishop archbishop is offline
has no status.
Expert PaGaL
 
archbishop's Avatar
 
Posts: 115
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: MUMBAI
Age: 24
Groans: 0
Groaned at 3 Times in 3 Posts
Thanks: 1
Thanked 25 Times in 13 Posts
Re: Analysis of essays, articles and edits - 13-06-2006, 05:25 PM

Sure T & S........ juz try to specify the tone of the article......my opinion is it is contrasting the two thoughts.......



A computer beat me at chess once.
But, it was no match for me at kick boxing.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usStumble this Post!
» Quote
  (#9)
archbishop archbishop is offline
has no status.
Expert PaGaL
 
archbishop's Avatar
 
Posts: 115
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: MUMBAI
Age: 24
Groans: 0
Groaned at 3 Times in 3 Posts
Thanks: 1
Thanked 25 Times in 13 Posts
Re: Analysis of essays, articles and edits - 13-06-2006, 05:36 PM

Debt bondage or bonded labor is a means of paying off a family's loans via the labour of family members or heirs. It is either a kind of indenture or truck system, and is therefore also a form of unfree labour. Historically, in the USA, it is also sometimes called peonage. (Note, however, that the word peon has broader implications and usage in Latin America.)
Prior to the early modern age, feudal and serfdom systems were the predominant political and economic systems in Europe. These systems were based on the holding of all land in fief or fee, and the resulting relation of lord to vassal, and was characterized by homage, legal and military service of tenants, and forfeiture. Many historians have argued that this system was also established in some Latin American countries, following European settlement.
A modernization of the feudal system was "peonage", where debtors were bound in servitude to their creditors until their debts were paid. Although peons — from a technical point of view — are only obligated to a creditor monetarily, from a practical perspective, the resultant relationship of a peon to the creditor is destructive of basic personal autonomy within the society.

Peonage means an unfree labour system where laborers are bound in servitude until their debts are paid in full. Those bound by such a system are known, in the US, as peons.
Employers typically force laborers to buy from employer-owned stores at inflated prices in order to keep them in debt. This is also a variation on the truck system (or company store system), in which workers are exploited by being paid only in minimal amounts of goods and/or services.
Such systems have existed in many places at many times throughout history.The American South - Such a system was often used in the southern United States after the American Civil War where African-American and poor white farmers, known as sharecroppers, were often forced to purchase seed and supplies from the owner of the land they farmed and pay the owner in a share of the crop.
In Peru a peonage system existed from the 1500s until land reform in the 1950s. One estate in Peru that existed from the late 1500s until the end of peonage had up to 1,700 peons employed and boasted its own jail. Peons were expected to work a minimum of three days a week for their landlord and more if necessary to complete assigned work. Workers were paid a symbolic 2 cents per year. Workers were unable to travel outside of their assigned lands without permission and were not allowed to organize any independent community activity.

According to Anti-Slavery International, "A person enters debt bondage when their labour is demanded as a means of repayment of a loan, or of money given in advance. Usually, people are tricked or trapped into working for no pay or very little pay (in return for such a loan), in conditions which violate their human rights. Invariably, the value of the work done by a bonded labourer is greater that the original sum of money borrowed or advanced."
At international law

Debt bondage has been defined by the United Nations as a form of "modern day slavery" [1] and is prohibited by international law. It persists nonetheless especially in developing nations, which have few mechanisms for credit security or bankruptcy, and where fewer people hold formal title to land or possessions. According to some economists, for example Hernando de Soto, this is a major barrier to development in those countries - entrepreneurs do not dare take risks and cannot get credit because they hold no collateral and may burden families for generations to come.
Despite the UN prohibition, Anti-Slavery International estimates that "between 10 and 20 million people are being subjected to debt bondage today."
News media in western Europe regularly carry reports about one particular kind of debt bondage: women from Eastern Europe who are forced to work in prostitution as a way to pay off the "debt" they acquired when they were illegally brought over the border.
According to Marxist economists, debt bondage is characteristic of feudal economies, where families are considered the responsible unit for financial relationships, and where heirs continue to owe parents' debts upon their deaths. Fully capitalist economies are characterized by the individual taking all responsibility, and such mechanisms as bankruptcy and death taxes reducing creditors' rights (while increasing the power of the state). Heirs are freed from the creditor, but at the cost of a drastically increased power accruing to the state itself.
Debt bondage is a form of disguised slavery in which the subject is not legally owned, but is instead bound by a contract to perform labor to work off a debt, under terms that make it impossible to completely retire the debt and thereby escape from the contract.

http://www.aboutsociology.com/sociology/Debt_peonage







A computer beat me at chess once.
But, it was no match for me at kick boxing.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usStumble this Post!
» Quote
  (#10)
archbishop archbishop is offline
has no status.
Expert PaGaL
 
archbishop's Avatar
 
Posts: 115
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: MUMBAI
Age: 24
Groans: 0
Groaned at 3 Times in 3 Posts
Thanks: 1
Thanked 25 Times in 13 Posts
Re: Analysis of essays, articles and edits - 13-06-2006, 05:49 PM

Subject: Sociology

( lotsa hyperlinks here so if u r particularly interested in any stuff do click.....its a gr8 source)

This article speaks about an important term called peonage. This kind of a system is not new to India......it has pervaded India throughout the ages by the name of Zamindari.

The article gives some instances where people were exploited monetarily, physically and even sexually sometimes for the debt taken by their forefathers.

The article then moves on to provide some definitions by some institutes.

It is interesting to note that peonage is essentially slavery..........by another name.

The article is written in simple language......(not quite usual for sociology passages)....and the idea is simple but the idea was new for me...read it for the info. it bestows.



A computer beat me at chess once.
But, it was no match for me at kick boxing.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usStumble this Post!
» Quote
» Post Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off

Forum Jump

» Sponsors

PaGaLGuY.com is not responsible for the views and opinions of the posters.
PaGaLGuY.com is an Inzane Labs Private Limited production.