Sunday, December 2, 2012

Google Search Tools

This post is all about how I used the various search tools on Google to refine my search while keeping the results relevant. My research question was "How do the democratic and republican positions on the "fiscal cliff" differ?"

As a starting point I just put the whole question as it is which got me 31,900,000 results. To narrow it down I tried the verbatim tool which gave me 13,800 results. This got me a lesser amount of results, but the information on the websites were not as relevant as I would like them to be.

Next, I put in ""fiscal cliff" AND democratic AND republican" which got me 159,000,000 results. No bueno. So I tried refining this search by selecting results in the past month which got me 62,000,000 results. These results were a little more relevant and some results did contrast democratic and republican positions. Then I tried using the verbatim tool again, but unfortunately it gave me 64,000,000 results which was more than I wanted.

Then, I tried searching "fiscal cliff democratic republican differ" which gave me 79,000,000 results. To refine this I used the past month search tool which gave me 473,000 results that were somewhat relevant to my research question. Just for fun, I used the same phrase except I used the translation search tool. Pages translated from French actually gave me 33,600 results even though the translations were horrible.

Lastly, I tried searching the same phrase up above while using a specific site. I tried the major news sites such as CNN, The New York Times, and Washington Post. CNN got me 46,700 results but focused more on the republican side of the issue. The New York Times got me 60,600 results which had some results that were relevant to the research question. Washington Post got me 46,400 results with the most diverse pool of results. I narrowed the search even further for the Washington Post results using the past month search tool which got me 5,820 results.

In conclusion, I think using the past month search tool was the most useful in narrowing down my results. Also using specific trustworthy news sites allowed me to get results that had more pertinent information than other websites. 

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Loneliness

Both Victor Frankenstein and his creature are lonely. Frankenstein has never been surrounded by many people and his creature is fated to be lonely because of his appearance.

Victor Frankenstein has isolated himself from his peers in his pursuit of knowledge. Yet his loneliness is most poignant after the death of Justine Moritz. Frankenstein knows that the creature killed William, but he chooses not to say anything, “Did anyone indeed exist, except I, the creator, who would believe, unless his senses convinced him, in the existence of the living monument of presumption and rash ignorance which I had let loose upon the world?” By identifying himself as the creator, Victor is separating himself from everyone else. Although he is anguished just like everyone else in his family over William’s death, he does not let himself tell them what happened in Ingolstadt or who really killed poor William. As a result, he becomes distant, “solitude was my only consolation-deep, dark, deathlike solitude.” Even when his father and Elizabeth try to reach out to him, he shuns them because he feels that he does not deserve their love. At this point in the novel, Frankenstein is very troubled and wants more than anything to be a part of his family, but cannot stop feeling guilty over the deaths of William and Justine.

Just as his creator is lonely, so is the creature. Throughout his short life, many people have run away from the creature and have left him alone. However, the creature truly got to know the French family in the cottage. He came to love Felix, Agatha, the old man, and eventually Safie. It was through their English lessons with Safie that the creature even learned to talk. As time goes on, the creature yearns to be a part of the family, “The more I saw of them, the greater became my desire to claim their protection and kindness; my heart yearned to be known and loved by these creatures; to see their sweet looks directed towards me with affection was the utmost limit of my affection.” The creature watches them from outside a window wanting desperately to be a part of the scene that he looks upon every day. In his loneliness, the creature decides to reach out to the family, but this ends in violence and horror. The creature is shunned by the family because of his appearance and again he is alone, "My protectors had departed and had broken the only link that held me to the world." The creature had dared to hope that he would be accepted, but he was wrong. As a result, his loneliness intensifies and at this point in the novel, he resolves to search for his father.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

How the Mighty Have Fallen

In Mary Shelley’s novel Frankenstein, both Robert Walton and Victor Frankenstein believe that they will be one of the people to enrich mankind and achieve something no one else has before. They believe that they will be greater than great. It is this desire to be great that drives them to spend their time wholly in pursuit of notoriety. As a result, they have become loners and the pursuit of knowledge has become their only companion. In this way they are similar to Ozymandias, a character in Percy Bysshe Shelley’s poem. He is the self-declared “king of kings” and tells everyone to “Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!” Just by this inscription on his statue, we can assume that Ozymandias is very arrogant and just like Walton and Frankenstein, wanted to be notorious and achieve something great that others could not possibly hope to achieve. However, the narrator describes the land around the statue of Ozymandias as “boundless and bare, The lone and level sands stretch far away.” Ozymandias might have wanted to be the greatest, but by the desert surrounding his crumbling statue, he is long forgotten. Based on the fall of Ozymandias, I believe that Walton and Frankenstein’s notoriety will not last very long. They might be doing mankind a service by trying to better people’s lives, but they are doing it for selfish purposes. Ozymandias is sculpted with a “frown, And wrinkled lip” indicating that he was not a very pleasant man to be around and wanted to be notorious for his own personal gain. Consequently, I believe that since Walton and Frankenstein are devoting their time to be great for their own purposes, they will not achieve notoriety for very long, if at all.

Monday, October 8, 2012

Science vs. Religion

Yes, I do think that science and religion will see life the same way. At a glance, they seem to be total opposites. Science deals with facts and concrete ideas that you can test over a long period of time and still get the same answer. Religion deals with faith and abstract ideas that you can't prove, but believe in nonetheless. As with any idea or set of beliefs, you will always have people who believe and people who do not believe. I believe that it is not science or religion themselves that create a division amongst people, but people themselves. Religion is a big leap for someone who can only accept the facts, which is why many scientists completely exclude religion out of their set of beliefs. This is understandable considering what religion stands for and abstract ideas have always been harder to accept than concrete ones.

Science and religion are two sets of beliefs that were made to be opposites because they arose from people with different viewpoints. In the past, many people have tried to bring science and religion together by proving that one cannot exist without the other. Usually religion exists because science needs a creator which only religion, not just science, can explain. However, these people received such fierce opposition that they either backed down or were oppressed. This is not to say that religion and science cannot ever see life the same way, just that people who believe in religion or science cannot accept that the other can also be true.

In the end, I believe that it is not the actual ideas of science and religion that cannot see life the same way, but the people who believe in those ideas that cannot ever see life the same way.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

My dream college

Hello! My name is Jennie J. My dream college is Harvard University. Yes, I know it's kind of impossible to get in, but if I had the chance to go there I would. Since I was little my parents have dreamed of sending me to Harvard because I have the grades to get in there, but it I used to hate these talks because I wasn't sure if I really wanted to spend four years of my life there. In the summer of 2010 my family and I went on vacation in Boston and I fell in love with the city. More importantly, I actually visited the Harvard campus and I could see myself there after high school. Not only did I like the campus and the city, but if I were to be accepted to Harvard, it would validate all the hard work and time I have put into school since I got letter grades.