Sperm donation

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    telling the story in a way that was honoring to the whales, even as you see all these horrible things being done to them, “The rope began to cut into the whale’s flesh (71)” as they tried to move it, “scientists used chainsaws to cut the lower jaws off sperm whales that had died only a few feet from whales that were not yet dead (72).” They story easily could have been told from a scientist’s point of view, or a city official’s point of view in a much colder tone. This essay set the perfect…

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    Fyffe House Analysis

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    In the town of Kaikoura, New Zealand, a heritage building is located by the Kaikoura Peninsula, known as the Fyffe House. This area is well known for bringing in European settlers around the 1840s due to whaling, and it is the interest in whales that makes it still relevant for people today through the recreation of whale watching. It appears that the Fyffe House is the only physical evidence that reflects the time of European settlement in this region. Therefore, it should be explored how the…

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    Whether Moby-Dick is a whale or a fish is a trifling matter—what is significant about it is that it is a great “white” whale. The color white is usually connected to innocence and purity; however, in “Moby-Dick”, the quintessentially white sperm whale defies the qualities attached to its color as Ahab sees it as the archetypal evil. In a novel overwhelmingly about whaling, Melville frequently explores colors and their meanings and use them to paint a picture of characters and sceneries in the…

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    Captain Ahab

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    In Herman Melville’s novel, “Moby Dick”, the protagonist, Ahab, is a whaling captain. He is fixated on killing and conquering a huge white whale that had bitten off his leg in a previous encounter. Though his manic behavior may be regarded by some as a sign of greatness, this is not the case. Instead, Captain Ahab’s character is that of a revenge-obsessed, egotistical, and mentally unstable man. In the beginning of the novel, the narrator explains that Captain Ahab paces the deck of his ship,…

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    Melville’s story Moby Dick. This book now film, tells the survival story of the men of the Essex, which was a whale hunting ship sent from Nantucket, which sadly did not return to its port. This is due to an unlikely attack; this attack was by a sperm whale. This sperm whale sunk, the Essex and left its inhabitants to survive the perilous natural world. No amount of survival courses or preparations could train these men to endure what they faced.…

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    For my analysis, the story that I've chosen is the Kraken by Arthur Lord Tennyson. The poem itself is derivative of the Norse legend of the creature, a more than giant squid-like monster that was rumored to live off the coasts of Norway and Greenland. It is said that the legend of the Kraken is most likely based on sightings of giant squids, who - like the Kraken - lay in the depths, but have reportedly surfaced in order to cause havoc and attack sailing vessels. It is often the victim of wild…

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    In his novel Moby-Dick, Herman Melville exposes humankind’s ingrained lust to conquer the natural world through the narrative of a doomed whaling voyage. A Dark Romantic, Melville seeks to depict the inner turmoil of humanity and the innate evil of mankind. The titular whale Moby-Dick represents nature and serves to prove that man can never overcome the power of earth. Melville portrays Moby-Dick as an indestructible whale with incredible strength and invincible might. Ahab has previously…

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    Cetacea

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    humans in terms of general intelligence (Reiss & Marino, 2001). Modern cetacean brains are among the largest of all mammals in terms of both general size and in relation to body size, with the largest brain in the animal kingdom being possessed by the sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus) (Marino, 2004) with a mass of 60% larger than that of an elephant (Marino et al., 2007). It is unsurprising that encephilization (a measure of the size of the brain relative to the body) is commonly linked to…

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    Organ Donation Case Study

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    available for transplants and the increase of kidney failure has created an epidemic of patients on dialysis who await a donor. As the current program of unpaid voluntary donors in North America is not adequate, many urge that compensation for organ donation could be a legitimate solution. The demand for a realistic resolution in organ transactions raises concerns on the breach of human integrity. This paper will explore the ethical dilemma of selling organs as commodities as morally acceptable…

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    from prisoners and war victims and even the sporadic organ theft cases. The exploitation seen within the black market will not disappear overnight, but the creation of a legalized compensation system will begin to decrease the current issue. As the donation list grows the organ need decreases and with a legalized system regulations can also protect the recipient. Shimazono (2007) notes that it is difficult to capture this data properly, but mentions that studies do show a heightened frequency of…

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