Tuesday, 8 May 2012

Fallacy of omission

This fallacy occurs because the logician leaves out necessary information or data an argument or misdirects others from a solid response, solution etc...

Thursday, 12 January 2012

Outline

Body 1: The rich are different: Tom and Gatsby
Body 2: You can't recapture the past: Gatsby trying to convince himself, and the others.
Body 3: Past Vs Present: Why and how Daisy is different.
Body 4: the rich are different, they are in aprivate suite in New york Alcohol: Nobody wants a drink because it's too hot... both the Oppressive weather and....
Body 5: Weather:
Body 6: Light: Daisy isn't "Light" anymore.
Body 7: Nick: Judging Tom what about his own language?
Body 8: Daisy: Confused
Body 9: Gatsby: Convincing himself.
structure?
other stuff?

Tuesday, 10 January 2012

Outline

Intro:
5 th satanza, Center of the book. (Poem reference)
IDEAS

Theme 1=Recapturing the past
Relate to text: Gatsby and Daisy, Not what expected... etc

(Theme 2= What shall we do tomorrow, in 30 years.
Relate to Gatsby
Motif)

Theme 3= Rich are different.
Relate to Daisy's comments, to Gatsby still being nervous.

Way of writing
Dicton
Organization
Length of sentences

Motifs
Weather light and money

Characters 3 paragraphs
Nick
Daisy
Gatsby

Tuesday, 13 December 2011

CHAPTER IV

He's a bootlegger
Rumours about Gatsby, going around the party. Motif: alcohol, of course, since he apparently sells it. And Nick is unreliable because he is only saying what he hears.

Once I wrote down on empty spaces of a time-table the names of those who came to Gatsby's house that summer.
Can't live in the past? Well he's trying, having noted down EVERYONE that went to the party. Nick, again is writing only what he knows and remembers.

Paid him the subtle tribute of knowing nothing whatever about him.

and a whole clan named Blackbuck, who always gathered in a corner and flipped up their noses like goats at whosoever came near.
I do not want what i already have: these people already have their own crowd, why would they want more people to be around them.

I doubt if he had any other home.
Haves and have nots, this man hasn't got a home, so he's using Gatsby's.

CHAPTER V

When I came home to West Egg that night I was afraid for a moment that my house was on fire.
What'll we do this day, tomorrow, and the next thirty years? What would nick do without a house? White/ Yellow fire, and Nick is unreliable: he tells us his house is on fire, but it's not.

Turning a corner, I saw that it was Gatsby's house, lit from tower to cellar.
White/ Yellow lights, and Gatsby is doing random things, Who is he?

He turned his eyes toward it absently.
Gatsby, absently looking around, still unsure of who he is. Haves and have nots, he has so much money, he doesn't ccare about anything.

Let's go to Coney Island, old sport. In my car.
It's too late.
Well suppose we take a plunge in the swimming-pool? I haven't made use of it all summer.
I've got to go to bed.
All right.
Haves and have nots, Gatsby has everything except Daisy, and he wants her so bad he can't wait to talk to Nick.

He waited, looking at me with suppressed eagerness. Again, not having Daisy bothers Gatsby, and Nick might've been wrong about Gatsby's expression.

Thursday, 1 December 2011

Film Four Act Structure

Bulleted List

ACT I – The Loner
Sequence #1 ( 01-10) Setup: Protagonist In The Ordinary World
Sequence #2 ( 11-20) Call to Adventure / Predicament / Inciting Incident
Sequence #3 (21-30) Turing Point: Change Of Plans / New Lower Obstacles

ACT II – The Wanderer
Sequence #4 ( 31-40) Elaborating on the Dilemma and The World of Story
Sequence #5 ( 41-50) Hero encounters TESTS, ALLIES, and ENEMIES.
Sequence #6 (51-60) Point Of No Return / Discovery Of False Goal

ACT III – Towards The True Goal: The Warrior Phase
Sequence #7 ( 61-70) Complications, Higher Stakes, And Subplots
Sequence #8 ( 71-80) Culmination Toward The Main Plot
Sequence #9 (81-90 ) All Hope Is Lost

ACT IV – Result Of The Action: The Martyr
Sequence #10 ( 91-95 ) Final Push Toward The Main Plot
Sequence #11 ( 96-100) False Resolution (The Twist)
Sequence #12 (101-105) Final Test of Character and True Resolution
Sequence #13 (106-110) Final Confrontation
Sequence #14 (111-115) Climax


Starship Troopers

Act I: The protagonist, Johnny Rico, is in the ordinary world, high school etc... When his girlfriend says she's going to enroll to become a military pilot, this is the call to adventure.

After he enrolls, his father isn't OK with it. And tells him he will be cut off. He then enrolls anyway.

Act II: Rico meets the people on his squad, making friends and enemies. After that, his girlfriend breaks up with him, which is when he realizes his goals were wrong.

Pinch: When Rico gets a man killed and his Ex's ship gets hit by a meteor on the way to Earth.

Act III: Rico gets promoted to squad leader, which heightens the stakes. Then, his home is destroyed by a bug meteor,

First key plot point: When the bug meteor crashes into his hometown killing his whole family

which leads to the main plot. After that, Rico and his mates are sent to the main bug planet, where a huge amount of people die and Rico also is shown dying. This is the point when all hope is lost.

Second key plot point: When Rico and his new squad are stuck in a fort with a whole colony of bugs is attacking.

Act IV: Rico is sent to find the brain bug, but during this, his Ex is stranded in a bug colony, Rico goes to help her which is a test of character and resolution. He confronts the brain bug, the final confrontation. And the climax happens when the bug is captured and "IT'S AFRAID"

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

Poem

Life, it's hard, but you survive, to prove to yourself you are worth it.

This poem talks about how a child was wounded, probably emotionally, and how the child kept living, to prove his father wrong about who the child was or something like that.

The second big idea is that the pain the child felt made him think he was unloved, alone and he was miserable for it. But that he later understood that the pain came from him loving people and suffering for that love.

In short, this poem tells people to keep fighting and that life is worth living with love.