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I Am Reading A Paper And Having Difficulties Understanding This Part Could Someone Tell Me What

Translate this Spanish please! I am having trouble understanding what the preterite verbs mean!?

the 3rd word in the 1st question should be informas

How do you inform yourself of what goes on in your city? In the world?

Did you read the newspaper this week? What newspaper? What section do you like most?

Do you like to take pictures? What pictures did you take during your last vacation?

Good Luck.

I am having trouble understanding Merleau-Ponty?

Merleau-Ponty is just clarifying that everyone of us is in fact deluded, for we are all in a state of believing our own illusory perception. Yes, the kind of perception we have with our five cognitive senses is said to be illusory, because the true perception easily gets contaminated by the known, by the suggestion of our thoughts; hence true perception could not get in the way.

True perception in whatever cognitive sense is being used is always in its pure state of perception, but since man still do not fully understand the process of his own thinking and of his own awareness, his every perception simply gets contaminated by the known, by his conditioning; hence only a thought-created perception, and therefore not really true.

The whole process of understanding perception can be compared to one's pure heart or mind. The impure and previously conditioned mind needs proper cleansing for clarity must be of most necessity. If you want to see clearly what's under the water, should not the water be as crystal clear as to easily see what's under it?

When the mind is cleared from all its previous conditioning, it becomes clear as crystal, and only then shall you see the true perception in action. For you will truly perceive, for the first time, what it is to be truly aware during perception and which remain uncontaminated in the present moment.

Why do I have so much difficulty articulating myself? Is there a known biological reason for this? Am I just unintelligent?

I struggled with the same issue for many years and still experience it occasionally. My symptoms aside from difficulties articulating, were also difficulty concentrating, difficulty following a conversation, brain fog, chronic fatigue and anxiety in uncomfortable situations. I've been diagnosed with everything possible, depression, anxiety, ADD etc... and have been put on various medication throughout the years. I'm not a doctor, so check in with your psychiatrist, but the following things helped me the most:1. Stimulants (specifically Adderall). Nothing else compares in effectiveness. Google a condition called "Sluggish Cognitive Tempo", its a variation of ADD and see if you have any of the symptoms. Adderall gave me the energy and turbo charged the processing speed of my brain which made having conversations 10 times easier.2. Dietary changes. I discovered that my body is sensitive to various foods and consuming them causes brain fog and sluggish thinking. I eliminated caffeine, sugar, alcohol and gluten and feel a huge difference.3. Sleep. I had trouble sleeping which worsened the symptoms. Make sure you sleep enough, especially if you suffer from depression. Aim for 8 hours. These 3 have made the most significant improvements, but your symptoms may vary. There are a lot of other minor changes that helped me in various ways, let me know if you have any specific questions.One thing to keep in mind with psychiatrists is that they tend to medicate everything and do not address the other issues such as nutrition and sleep very well, so you'll have to put some effort into figuring those out on your own.

Help with James Madison Federalist 51 papers!! i got some questions please!?

I need help with the federalist 51 papers! i have read it and i sort of understand it. but im still having some problems
can anyone please help me out with any of these questions???
pleaseee
I mostly need help with paragraph 2 number3, Paragrapsh 4 number 2. paragraph 5 number 1, paragraph 6 number 4 and paragraph 9-10 number 1
i would appreciate if anyone could also help me out with the other questions as well!

Paragraph 1:
1. What is Madison’s general purpose in writing Federalist 51?

Paragraph 2.
2. What does separation of power require?
3.Why does Madison think the judiciary should deviate from the appointment process of the other branches?

Paragraph 3.
4.What does Madison say about the members of each department?

Paragraph 4.
5.What is the great security against one department growing too powerful?
6.Why is it necessary for “ambition to counteract ambition”?
7.What is Madison’s famous quote that illustrates man’s ambitions and the need for controls?
8.What does Madison describe as the greatest problem inherent in a government of men?

Paragraph 5.
9.What are the “auxiliary precautions” Madison alludes to in the previous paragraph?

Paragraph 6.
10.Who will dominate a republican government?
11.What is the remedy for this?
12.Would an absolute veto remedy this?

Paragraph 9-10.
13. What are two considerations for the federal system of America?

I don't understand anything involved with economics in my AP Us History class?

In a nutshell, the author seeks to persuade you that the depression starting in 1929 was caused by poor government mismanagement rather than by irresponsible greedy investors. In the first paragraph, the author mentions buying on margin and how it was not done more at the time we started the depression, as compared to some years beforehand. The author suggests the opposite that there was less buying on margin. The point the author wants to make is that we did not see margin buying skyrocket and result in an economic collapse, as he suggests others would want you to believe. What is margin buying? Basically like buying stocks on your credit card. When the price of stocks comes down, you still have to pay. That is not an accurate definition, but serves to make the point that there is risk and uncertainty in buying on margin. The actual process is giving cash to a broker to buy stocks, and then using the value of your stocks to borrow the money to buy more stocks. The broker will only lend you, say, 50% of the value of your original stock to fund your margin account. If the value of that stock goes down, the 50% you can borrow is a smaller number. If the smaller number is less than you actually borrowed, the broker wants you to put in more cash to make it up. This is a "margin call." When people cannot cover their margin calls, on a wide spread basis due to significant other economic problems, the result in an affect on other factors of the economy. Hence, margin purchases are seen by some as risky and irresponsible. However, it is the point of the author that others have blamed margin purchasing for the great depression, that it is not true, that certain government actions caused the great depression.

How do I understand books im reading?

I totally know what you mean. Reading comprehension seemed to come to me almost like magic... I have NO IDEA what made me suddenly understand what books were actually about and how to understand symbolism without someone explaining it to me.

I look back to my sophomore year, and the books I read, and the only reason I "understood" them was because cliffnotes told me, or a teacher told me. I never thought I'd be able to understand symbolism on my own.

The turning point in my reading comprehension, I think, was when someone told me what the overall picture of the story was, and left it up to me to find the clues. Instead of giving me the clues and hoping I'd come up with the answer, someone finally gave me the answer, and that taught me how to "look" for the clues.

For example, I didn't understand Catcher in the Rye at all the first time I read it in High School. Then later, I was told "Holden is terrified of growing up... knowing that, find clues that support that answer"

So, even before beginning the book (for a second time) I knew what I was looking for. Growing up meant "changing", so I looked for things that were changing, looked for things that weren't changing, and I found SO many clues! He loves the museum because it never changes, he is really annoyed when the ducks leave the pond because he just likes things to stay the same.

I don't know if that's the answer for you, but you might be someone who can understand the "smaller pictures" of the clues, if you're given the "bigger picture" of the book?

Hopefully that helps you out! Don't worry, I got good grades in High School English even though I didn't really understand what was going on... I would just listen to what my teachers and classmates said, and parrot it back. I wasn't a GREAT student, but I made it through, and now I consider myself a pretty comprehensive reader.

Best of luck!

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