Dickens’s Hard Times: Victorian Industrial Critique
Dickens’s Critique of Victorian Systemic Sins
In Hard Times (1854), Charles Dickens exposed the “terrible mistakes of these days,” aiming to shake Victorian society out of its complacency. The novel denounces systemic sins: the insolence of the rich, the law’s lack of sympathy, and the cruel treatment of children in dehumanizing schools and factories. As George Bernard Shaw noted, Dickens shifted from attacking individual villains to condemning the institutional system as a whole. F.R. Leavis echoed
Read MoreModernization and Geopolitical Shifts in East Asia
Clan Rule (Sedo Jeongchi)
Sedo Jeongchi refers to the 19th-century period when royal authority weakened after King Jeongjo’s death (1800). Power was usurped by aristocratic families, notably the Andong Kim clan, who controlled the court through nepotism. This system turned the state into a private patronage network, where the sale of public offices (maegwan maejik) undermined administrative integrity and national defense.
This decay led to the collapse of the Three Systems (Samjeong):
- Jeonjeong (Land
Mastering Literary Analysis and American Literature
Close Reading Essay Structure
- Introduction: Identify the passage, author, and date. State your thesis clearly at the end of the intro.
- Body Paragraphs: Use inductive reasoning to move from specific details to a larger conclusion. Quote specific words or phrases as evidence and address counter-arguments to show how the text complicates your thesis.
- Conclusion: Answer the “Why does this matter?” question and explain the larger implications of your thesis.
Elements to analyze: Audience and purpose, content
Read MoreCorporate Governance and Share Capital Regulations
These final modules bridge the gap between how a company manages its internal operations versus how it interacts with outsiders and raises money from the public.
Corporate Governance Legal Doctrines
These two doctrines act as opposite sides of a coin to balance protection between the company and outside parties.
Doctrine of Constructive Notice
This doctrine protects the company against outsiders.
Because the Memorandum of Association (MoA) and Articles of Association (AoA) are registered with the Registrar
Read MoreSupervised and Unsupervised Learning Model Reference
Supervised Classification
Logistic Regression (LR)
- Type: Binary Classification
- Scaling: Yes (StandardScaler)
- Outliers: Not robust
- Categorical Variables: No (encode first)
- Core Idea: Sigmoid function maps output to 0–1 probability; threshold ≥ 0.5 predicts class 1.
- Advantages: Fast, simple, interpretable, outputs probabilities.
- Disadvantages: Binary only, requires linear boundary, fails on non-linear data.
- Metrics: Accuracy, Precision, Recall, F1-Score, Confusion Matrix.
Decision Trees (DT)
- Type: Classification
Greek Mythology: Origins, Gods, and Heroic Cycles
Cosmogony and Chaos
The Origins of the Universe
- Cosmogony: The study of how and when the universe was created.
- Theogony: The study of how and when the gods and humans were born.
- Eschatology: The study of how and when life ends.
The official religion addressed Cosmogony and Theogony, first recorded by the lyric poets of the Archaic Period. Eschatology was primarily dealt with in the religious cults of the Greek mysteries.
Primordial Gods
Hesiod’s Theogony is the foundational story of the world’s origin.
Read MoreModern Society: Culture, Education, and Global Challenges
1. The Benefits of Learning Foreign Languages
Nowadays, learning foreign languages is extremely important in our globalized world. Languages connect people, cultures, and countries, making communication easier and more effective.
First of all, multilingualism improves career opportunities. Many international companies prefer employees who can communicate with foreign partners and clients. Knowledge of English, Spanish, French, or Mandarin significantly increases professional mobility and competitiveness
Read MoreC++ OOP Fundamentals: Classes, Objects, and Encapsulation
C++ was originally called “C with Classes” because its primary purpose was to add Object-Oriented Programming (OOP) features to the C language. Here is a detailed breakdown of these core object-oriented features.
1. Core OOP Concepts
Classes and Objects
- Class: A user-defined data type that acts as a blueprint or template for creating objects. It defines data (attributes) and functions (behavior) grouped together.
- Object: An instance of a class. When a class is defined, no memory is allocated, but memory
Macroeconomics Principles and Economic Indicators
Macroeconomic Foundations and the Great Depression
1. Explain why the Great Depression is an important event in the history of Macroeconomics?
The Great Depression (1929–1930s) caused a severe fall in GDP and very high unemployment. It showed that markets are not always self-correcting and led to the development of Keynesian macroeconomics.
2. List 3 main macroeconomic goals:
- High and stable economic growth
- Low unemployment
- Low and stable inflation
Measuring Economic Activity and GDP
3. Write down the
Read MoreInternet vs. World Wide Web: Key Differences Explained
Internet vs. World Wide Web: The Core Differences
The Internet and the World Wide Web (WWW) are often used interchangeably, but they are two distinct technologies. In short: the Internet is the highway, and the World Wide Web is the traffic that drives on it.
1. What is the Internet?
The Internet is a global network of interconnected computers and physical infrastructure. It is the underlying hardware and software framework that allows devices worldwide to communicate.
- The Infrastructure: Millions of
