Friday, January 24, 2020

Does Life Have a Meaning? Essays -- Philosophy Philosophical Essays

Does Life Have a Meaning? Life, it might be argued, is the distinguishing feature of all organisms and may most usefully be thought of as involving various kinds of complex systems of organization providing individual organisms with the ability to make use of those energy sources available to them for both self maintenance and reproduction. Underlying this deceptively persuasive definition, however, lie those persistent traditional problems inherent in the search for an essential, distinctive substance characteristic of all forms of life. Additionally, as evolution theory makes clear, there is the problem of borderline instances, organisms of which it is not easy to say whether or not they may be defined as being alive. One such case is that of the virus. Viruses are the smallest, simplest living things, smaller than bacteria, and the cause of some of the deadliest diseases known to humanity. They are composed chiefly of nucleic acid wrapped in a coat of protein and are able to multiply only from within living cells. As with all other organisms, the virus depends for its ability to obtain energy and carry out the other processes necessary to sustain life, upon its stock of DNA, the hereditary material that makes up the genes, the "instructions" that determine the traits of every living organism. What is interesting about viruses, however, is that their genetic stock is very meagre indeed, so much so that reliance upon it alone cannot enable them to survive. Nonetheless, viruses do persist from one generation to the next, as if they were alive. How this is managed, as it clearly is in both plants, animals and human beings, bears importantly upon the ways in which "life", at least in the case of viruses, may legitimately b... ... our ability not only to understand our human limitations, but also to appreciate their unimportance in our situation: "If sub specie aeternitatis there is no reason to believe that anything matters, then that doesn't matter either, and we can approach our absurd lives with irony instead of heroism or despair." Bibliography: Brian, Denis Einstein: A Life John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1996 Hanfling, Oswald (ed.) Life and Meaning: A Reader Blackwell F, Open University, 1987 Mill, John Stuart Utilitarianism Dent Dutton (Everyman), 1962 Plato Gorgias trans. Hamilton, W., Penguin, 1960 Russell, Bertrand History of Western Philosophy Allen and Unwin, 1962 Works consulted following initial assessment of essay: Murdoch, Iris The Sovereignty of Good Routledge, 1991 Nagel, Thomas The Possibility of Altruism Princeton Paperback, 1978 Does Life Have a Meaning? Essays -- Philosophy Philosophical Essays Does Life Have a Meaning? Life, it might be argued, is the distinguishing feature of all organisms and may most usefully be thought of as involving various kinds of complex systems of organization providing individual organisms with the ability to make use of those energy sources available to them for both self maintenance and reproduction. Underlying this deceptively persuasive definition, however, lie those persistent traditional problems inherent in the search for an essential, distinctive substance characteristic of all forms of life. Additionally, as evolution theory makes clear, there is the problem of borderline instances, organisms of which it is not easy to say whether or not they may be defined as being alive. One such case is that of the virus. Viruses are the smallest, simplest living things, smaller than bacteria, and the cause of some of the deadliest diseases known to humanity. They are composed chiefly of nucleic acid wrapped in a coat of protein and are able to multiply only from within living cells. As with all other organisms, the virus depends for its ability to obtain energy and carry out the other processes necessary to sustain life, upon its stock of DNA, the hereditary material that makes up the genes, the "instructions" that determine the traits of every living organism. What is interesting about viruses, however, is that their genetic stock is very meagre indeed, so much so that reliance upon it alone cannot enable them to survive. Nonetheless, viruses do persist from one generation to the next, as if they were alive. How this is managed, as it clearly is in both plants, animals and human beings, bears importantly upon the ways in which "life", at least in the case of viruses, may legitimately b... ... our ability not only to understand our human limitations, but also to appreciate their unimportance in our situation: "If sub specie aeternitatis there is no reason to believe that anything matters, then that doesn't matter either, and we can approach our absurd lives with irony instead of heroism or despair." Bibliography: Brian, Denis Einstein: A Life John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1996 Hanfling, Oswald (ed.) Life and Meaning: A Reader Blackwell F, Open University, 1987 Mill, John Stuart Utilitarianism Dent Dutton (Everyman), 1962 Plato Gorgias trans. Hamilton, W., Penguin, 1960 Russell, Bertrand History of Western Philosophy Allen and Unwin, 1962 Works consulted following initial assessment of essay: Murdoch, Iris The Sovereignty of Good Routledge, 1991 Nagel, Thomas The Possibility of Altruism Princeton Paperback, 1978

Thursday, January 16, 2020

Alfred Adler and His Personality Theory

Alfred Adler was born in the suburbs of Vienna to a grain merchant and his wife on the 7th February 1870. He was the third child and second son of his parents. He could not walk until the age of four due to his lingering rickets. At the age of five, he went down with a chronic pneumonia which nearly took his life, and on recovery, resolved to become a medical doctor, even at the very young age.He retained this ambition throughout his school years, although he was merely an averagely clever student who, due to a period of lack of seriousness with and loss of commitment to his studies, tended towards becoming a dullard. This tendency made his teacher write him off as one not cut out for academic success— and his woeful performance at Mathematics seemed to testify to this pronouncement. However, his father’s belief in his abilities and his own self-assurance and self-esteem spurred him on to renewed commitment and revival.He proved his teacher’s pronouncement wrong: Not only did he rise to become the best Mathematics student, he pursued his medical ambition to the University of Vienna where he achieved his medical degree. During his schooling years, Adler was â€Å"quite outgoing, popular and active† (Boeree, George, 2006).He had a strong personality and firm resolution (qualities which explain why he could sustain and realize his medical ambition in the face of his teacher’s despise and pessimism). Adler began his medical career as an opthamologist, but later turned to general medical practice.He established his office somewhere in the lower class part of Vienna, across from an amusement park-cum-circus. Most of his clients and patients were circus performers. This fact gave him the opportunity to observe, study and investigate their unusual strengths and weaknesses, which they demonstrated through their relative physiological resistances and tolerance, leading him to the formulation of a theory he termed â€Å"organic inferior ities and compensations†. He later switched to psychiatry and joined Freud’s discussion group.In this group, he got the opportunity to develop and articulate his organic theory, to which Freud agreed; however, his subsequent theory of the aggression instinct were against Frend’s beliefs, just as was his suggestion that the sexual notions which Freud upheld should be taken figuratively rather than literally.Alfred Adler sought to investigate the human personality and behaviour: what fundamentally made up the human personality and what made all human beings behave the way they did, irrespective of their backgrounds, individualities, privileges or lack of them.His conclusions, he formulated as a theory of personality In the course of the Second World War, Alfred became a Physician for the Austrian army, first serving on the Russian front before moving to the children’s hospital. This change gave him the opportunity for a first-hand observation of the war vict ims and causalities.It probably was the shock and horror from these direct observations that made him develop an interest in the concept of social interest, coming to the conclusion that â€Å"if humanity was to survive, it had to change its ways. † (George B, 2006).In 1926, he went to the United States to work as a lecturer. He died of heart attack in 1937 in the course of his lecturing.ALFRED ADLER’S PERSONALITY THEORYAlfred Adler’s theory of personality offers the underlying motivation not only of all human behavior but also for the development of the human personality. He postulated ‘a single â€Å"drive† or motivating force behind all our behavior and experience’ (Boeree, 2006). He believed that every human action, rational or irrational, arises out of an urge for perfection, out of an underlying desire for the attainment of some ideal.However, because he believed no two human beings are exactly alike, even in their responses to this â⠂¬Å"single† drive, he called this theory â€Å"Individual Psychology. † The â€Å"ideal†, also termed â€Å"perfection†, however, points to an ultimate image of himself that every individual often unconsciously harbors as the goal to which he or she must attain.Adler termed this ultimate image â€Å"fictional finalism† (Alfred Adler (1870-1937), 2007). Thus, every human action or behavior, according to Adler, is an attempt to draw nearer to the realization of his or her potentials and, ultimately, to realization of the â€Å"fictional finalism†.This attempt, which he called â€Å"striving for perfection†, is sometimes referred to as â€Å"striving for superiority† (Alfred Adler (1870-1937), 2007) ,to give it the suggestion of something attainable and realizable, and to distinguish it from the impracticality of idealism and perfectionism (â€Å"in psychology, [idealism and perfectionism]) are often given a rather negative connot ation. Perfection and ideals are, practically by definition, things you can't reach. Many people, in fact, live very sad and painful lives trying to be perfect!† ([Boeree, 2006]).â€Å"Superiority† in the above context refers to a state or situation towards which every human action is directed—be it the satisfaction of a physical instinct, meeting financial or cultural obligations or working towards the realization of a political objective.A â€Å"superiority† or â€Å"betterment† is always in view, motivating the action. ‘According to Adler â€Å"We all wish to overcome difficulties. We all strive to reach a goal by the attainment of which we shall feel strong, superior, and complete. â€Å"’ (Alfred Adler (1870-1937), 2007).The striving towards â€Å"superiority† is therefore driven by the fundamental and all-inspiring striving towards the realization of â€Å"fictional finalism†. The â€Å"fictional finalism† i s the hidden force that drives, motivates, informs and decides. It induces the urge for self-improvement. It is the spirit of all actions, however commonplace or ordinary, the heart of every aspiration, determining the range of all material or immaterial acquisitions— of all â€Å"treasures†: it defines them and â€Å"draws them to itself† in an attempt towards self-fulfillment and self- realization. Thus, â€Å"Where your treasure is, there will your heart also be† (Mathew 6:21).ASPECTS OF ALFRED ALDER’S THEORYFour aspects of Alder Alfred’s theory have been identified: The development of personality, striving towards superiority, psychological health and unity of personality (Fisher, 2001).THE DEVELOPMENT OF PERSONALITYThe development of personality begins in childhood, with the â€Å"striving for superiority† referred to above and the at-first unconscious attempts towards the realization of potentials: â€Å"children observe more c ompetent elders around them and this motivates them to acquire new skills and develop new talents (Weiten, 1992, p. 484). † (Alfred Adler (1870-1937), 2007).These attempts at acquisition of new skills and development of new talents, Adler attributes to a healthy feeling of inferiority – inferiority to the elders who have cultivated and now exhibit such skills and talents, and who now stand to be â€Å"looked up to† ( being â€Å"superior†) by the children. With time, as the potentials develop, and age and physical maturity advance, fictional finalism in the developing child makes itself increasingly felt, with such fundamental accompanying manifestations as the urge for self-assertion and the associated desire to have to control over one’s life, enjoying freedom of individuality.â€Å"People [become] focused on maintaining control over their lives. † (Fisher, 2001). These manifestations are perhaps better recognized in such phenomena later in the child’s life as: an uncompromising choice of career or life partner; inflexible pursuits of a political or sport ambition, or the devotion to some preoccupying or obsessing religious or even recreational cause.Interference or intrusion in the pursuit of these individual assertions of personality are naturally resisted by the man or woman in question, because hand in hand with the self-assertive realizations of the fictional- finalism urges goes a desire to retain control over one’s life. Acquiescing to such interferences is, therefore, unnatural for a personality.STRIVING TOWARDS SUPERIORITYSuperiority, according to Adler Alfred, is not â€Å"superior over, not competition† (Adler Alfred’s â€Å"individual Psychology†).It is, rather, a healthy urge towards self-fulfillment and self-actualization.. Every endeavor, every attempt to achieve or merely to do something is, consequently, an attempt to attain to higher or â€Å"superior† levels of personality development—an â€Å"upward movement† or â€Å"ascent† to a better situation or condition of physical, mental or psychological state. Striving towards superiority is, thus, an integral part of living; it is â€Å"innate in the sense that it is a part of life.Trhoughout [sic] a person's life, Adler believed [a person] is motivated by the need to overcome the sense of inferiority and strive for ever higher levels of development. † (Adler Alfred’s â€Å"individual Psychology†). The striving for superiority begins with the spirit of the following Biblical recommendation: Thorns and snares are in the way of the froward: he that doth keep his soul [as well as his mind, drives and impulses] shall be far from them.Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old he will not depart from it. (Proverbs 22: 5-6). In the first sentence, â€Å"keeping† of the soul – and by implication, the mind, drives and impulse s – suggests the significance of early childhood upbringing to the development of the personality. â€Å"The froward† is deducibly the individual of an unhealthy personality, one who does not â€Å"keep†, i. e. , pay attention to and take care of, the nature and promptings of his or her inherent fictional finalism.The next sentence contains a practical, resolving recommendation: â€Å"Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old he will not depart from it† Two suggestions are perhaps apparent from this recommendation: one, that the social, educational and moral upbringing of the child is fundamental to the health of its drives and impulses (to its â€Å"soul†), and, consequently, to the direction of its fictional finalism (the entirety of its pursuits, habits, peculiarities and voluntary socialization); two, that the image of the fictional finalism is composed essentially of the childhood orientation, which more or less â€Å"compe ls† the child to keep to paths of this image later in life, that is, â€Å"prevents† the child from â€Å"departing from it when he is old†.This deduction does not, however, lessen the force of Adler’s assertion of individuality of personality; for the quite observable fact that no two children are exactly alike suggests that the individuality of the child plays a role in its adaptation to and development through its childhood orientation. Identical twins under identical childhood upbringing will therefore never develop identically.While they might demonstrate similar good or bad upbringing, they will certainly not behave or think alike, nor will they aspire towards identical self-realizations. Therefore, â€Å"striving towards superiority† depends more on the individuality of the child and its upbringing than on the social, educational or cultural influences to which the child may be later subjected.PSYCHOLOGICAL HEALTHThe psychological health of a personality depends on a number of factors suggested by the concept of â€Å"striving towards superiority† and by the fact that â€Å"Everyone feels inferior to a degree, which motivates us to get better†¦Ã¢â‚¬  (Alfred Adler (1870-1937), 2007). These factors include:(i) Healthy inferiority feelings.(ii) Positive fictional finalism.(iii) Absence of idealism and perfectionism.In the light of the preceding subsections, these factors indicate the relevance of the assertion that â€Å"Good understanding giveth favour; but the way of transgressors is hard. † (Proverbs 13:15). Ensuring health of inferiority feelings, helping the development of a positive fictional finalism and working towards the absence of idealism and perfectionism, all naturally require â€Å"good understanding† of the workings of the personality . Such an understanding will prevent the development of a â€Å"hard†, â€Å"transgressing† personality—a personality overste pping all limits of rationality and propriety in the urges and the actualization of its self-image.(i) Healthy Inferiority feelings: Adler was said (Fisher, M. 2001) to describe inferiority feelings as â€Å"feelings of lack of worth†, which he believed to motivate the individual towards striving for superiority. However, as with everything, there are healthy and unhealthy inferiority feelings.These two kinds are naturally to be differentiated through the nature of the psychological and impulsive effects each induces. Healthy inferiority feelings, as is shown above, are progressive; unhealthy inferiority feelings, retrogressive. Unhealthy inferiority feelings can be named apart from healthy inferiority feelings by terming them â€Å"inferiority complex†, which Oxford Talking Dictionary (1998) defines as â€Å"an unrealistic feeling of general inadequacy caused by actual or supposed inferiority in one sphere†¦Ã¢â‚¬ The lack of â€Å"reality† in these feeli ngs already marks them as undesirable and counter-productive. Further in support of their undesirableness is the statement from Brainmeta (2007): People might cope with an inferiority complex by becoming tentative, helpless, and lazy, or by engaging in behavior, called overcompensation.Overcompensation involves trying to hide one's sense of inferiority from others and even from oneself. People who overcompensate might be vocal about their successes and qualities and exaggerate them. Also, they tend to get wrapped up in status, power, and materialism. They believe all of these things give the appearance of superiority (Weiten, 1992, p. 484). †The fostering and the sustenance of healthy inferiority feelings, as is suggested by the excerpt from the Book of Proverbs above, demand knowledge or â€Å"good understanding† of personality psychology—knowledge of such social and familial conditions as might cause psychological and personality irregularities. One source of s uch good knowledge is the implications or ramifications of Adler Alfred’s theories of personality and his assertions in the process of formulating these theories. For instance, Adler was said (Fisher, 2001) to maintain â€Å"that personality difficulties are rooted in a feeling of inferiority deriving from restrictions on the individual's need for self-assertion. † This statement clearly recommends freedom of self-assertion for children and adults alike.However, marrying this suggested recommendation to that of the Book of Proverbs excerpted above (which is another source of â€Å"good understanding†) modifies this recommendation and keeps it within limits: it suggests that freedom of assertion must be within the limits of a sound upbringing and realistic self-discipline.(ii) Positive fictional finalism and (iii) Absence of Idealism and Perfectionism are both clearly dependent on the existence of healthy inferiority feelings. The soul of all aspirations resides as much in the impulses of inferiority feelings as it does in those of fictional finalism. In other words, an individual’s fictional finalism determines the nature (and, therefore, the health) of his or her inferiority feelings.Idealism and perfectionism, as has been suggested above, can lead to tormenting self-criticisms due to the high expectations their bearer has of him or herself. It is understandable that both can derive from an attempt to overcompensate for inferiority complex— to make up for the unhealthy inferiority feelings that have developed from an unhealthy personality.UNITY OF PERSONALITYWith his postulates that there is ‘a single â€Å"drive† or motivating force behind all our behavior and experience’ (Boeree, 2006), and that â€Å"the conscious and unconscious worked together to achieve the goals of self-improvement and fictional finalism† (Alfred Adler (1870-1937), 2007), Alfred Adler suggested the existence of unity of pers onality.First, if the conscious and the unconscious work towards the common goal of self-improvement and fictional finalism, then every conscious feeling, thought, or emotion of a human being, be they pleasant or unpleasant, unite with his or her every unconscious feeling or emotion towards the fulfillment of these goals. The goal, however, is always striven towards, since it is the â€Å"motivating force behind all †¦ behaviour and experience† (Boeree, 2006).Consequently, every conscious feeling and thought is unceasingly in union and co-operation with every unconscious feeling and thought towards the attainment of the common goal of self-actualization. Second, if the conscious and the unconscious are, consequently, unceasingly united, it follows that the goals of self-improvement and of fictional finalism are in a ceaseless union.However, â€Å"Adler postulated that, beyond general [self-] improvement, each person has an ideal image they are trying to achieve†¦. This image of the perfect self is called the fictional finalism (Elverud, 1997). † † (Alfred Adler (1870-1937), 2007). Consequently, standing â€Å"beyond† the goal of â€Å"general improvement† (and connected with this goal), fictional finalism unites the urge for self-improvement, the conscious and the unconscious for a common purpose, and therefore forms the centerpiece of every drive and impulse of the personality. Therefore, unity of personality is the joint striving of every conscious and unconscious emotion, thought, feeling and action towards ultimate self-actualization.Adler therefore believed that there is an agreement among every aspiring, desiring, thinking, and acting of a human being: that unhealthy feelings of inferiority indicate the existence of unhealthy fictional finalism; that a restricted self-assertion and incomplete control of ones life can be recognized through the restricted thinking, feeling and acting of the individual in question ; that the extent of the realization of potentials is reflected in the extent of freedom of thought, opinion, speech and action of an individual†¦These deductions find support in a figurative appreciation of the following Biblical excerpt: â€Å"Every man is brutish in his knowledge: every founder is confounded by the graven image: for his molten image is falsehood, and there is no breath in them. † (Jeremiah 10:14). If the â€Å"graven image† is taken as the image of a dead, i. e. unrealistic fictional finalism, then the personality harboring such an image is bound to be â€Å"confounded† in his aspirations and his opinions, â€Å"brutish† in his outlook and expectations, and â€Å"false† in his interactions with fellow human beings.A practical example of such a person is a maniacal perfectionist whom no one could ever please or satisfy.ReferencesALFRED ADLER'S â€Å"INDIVIDUAL PSYCHOLOGY†. Retrieved April 10th, 2007 from http://www. s onoma. edu/users/d/daniels/adler. html.ALFRED ADLER. Retrieved 10th April 2007 from http://www. muskingum. edu/~psych/psycweb/history/adler. htm#Theory Alfred Adler (1870-1937). Retrieved 11th April 2007 from http://brainmeta. com/personality/adler. php.BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF ALFRED ADLER. Retrieved April 11, 2007 from http://ourworld. compuserve. com/homepages/hstein/adler. htm In Cambridge Advanced learner’s Dictionary. Retrieved 11th April, 2007 from http://dictionary. cambridge. org/results. asp? searchword=opthamologist&x=12&y=8.In Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved April 3, 2007, from Encyclop? dia Britannica Online: http://www. britannica. com/eb/article-9003744.North American Society of Adlerian Psychology. NASAP : . Retrieved April 12th, 2007 from http://www. alfredadler. org/.Personality Theory, Alfred Adler. Retrieved April 12, 2007, from http://webspace. ship. edu/cgboer/adler. html.Psychography : Alfred Adler. Psychography. Retrieved April 9th 2007, from http://f aculty. frostburg. edu/mbradley/psyography/alfredadler. html.The Holy Bible, King James Version. THOMAS NELSON, PUBLISHERS. Nashville. Camden. Newyork. The Oxford Talking Dictionary, 1998 Edition.

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

Foreign exchange rish in financial institutions in Pakistan - Free Essay Example

Sample details Pages: 15 Words: 4567 Downloads: 6 Date added: 2017/06/26 Category Finance Essay Type Research paper Did you like this example? Abstract Companiesà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢ especially multinational companies and financial institutes like banks and insurance companies are now exposed to foreign currency risks caused by unexpected movements in exchange rate. In order to survive in this competition age companies have to manage this foreign exchange risk in a planned and good manner. The purpose of this study is to describe the different types of risks faced by financial institutions in Pakistan. Don’t waste time! Our writers will create an original "Foreign exchange rish in financial institutions in Pakistan" essay for you Create order These risks may include translation risk, transaction risk and operating risk. Research also includes the management and measurement of foreign exchange risk and studies the different methods of hedging this risk. The research was conducted through internet, analyzing the financial reports of different financial institutes and face to face interviews conducted from different executives of different financial institutes. Foreign exchange risk has a great impact on the cash flows and operating profits of an organization while doing business abroad and organizations have to familiar to manage and hedge this risk by using different derivatives and choose the best method that is suitable to organization. Managing the foreign exchange risk through hedging and use of derivatives is very common in these days. Organization often uses leading and lagging technique and less uses the swaps and invoice currency methods. 1- Introduction In this section the back ground of the research will be presented. On the basis of back ground we will make a research question and then followed the proposition for a financial institutionà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s foreign exchange risk. 1.1 Background of the study With the fast development of economic globalization since 70à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s of last century, today companies operate in as integrated world marketplace. The international market produces the global producer, supplier, customer and also global competitors. Now a dayà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s money has no national boundaries. Meanwhile the increasing global business has brought many new problems and opportunities for organizations. They also facing different kinds of risks involving operation risk, investment risk and financing risk etc. to be familiar with those risks and how to hedge and control these risks is very important for organizations. Especially the foreign exchange risk is placed at the top of the risks to be concerned for an effective management. Multinational corporations and multinational enterprises are the entities that operate in at least two countries in both ways i.e production and rendering services. Recently foreign exchange risk has got the increasing importanc e in both sectors corporate and literature. Focusing on different aspects, a no of studies have been done in order to develop the theory and provide the facts of corporate sector in foreign exchange risk. Some of them like Charles, Ronald and Herman tried to study the exchange rate behavior and others like Anderson Bollerslev, Diebold and Paul attempted to study the volatility of exchange rates. Present monitory system is illustrate by a mix of floating and managed exchanged rate policies that every country perused in its best interest. Any appreciation of a currency against other will bring export down and vise versa. Financial institutions must understand the foreign exchange risk in order to compete, survive and grow in their business of exports and to avoid from competition in imports. ________________________________________________________________________ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multinational_corporation 1.2 Research questions What exchange risk does a financial institute face and whether they hedge it or not. Whether these institutions used derivatives instruments to hedge exchange rate risk or not. What derivatives are used by these financial institutions in order to hedge the exchange risk? How these organizations measure the exposure of foreign exchange. What would be the objectives of foreign exchange risk management in financial institutions in Pakistan 1.3 Purpose Main purpose of this research is to describe the actual condition of foreign exchange risk in financial institutions in Pakistan. And how these organizations manage this risk and what efforts are done by these organizations to hedge the risk. 1.4 Disposition Chapter one: Introduction Content: This part is that where the research topic was introduced along with the importance of the foreign exchange risk management, the background of study and our purpose of study. The research problem and questions has been brought up, and we provide reader with our research purpose. Chapter two: Literature review Content: it is the literature review part. It will include the theory of foreign exchange risk management concepts of foreign exchange risk, its classification, characteristics, and different methods and techniques to manage and hedge this risk. Chapter three: Research methodology Content: This part is about the methods and techniques used for research purpose that how the data will be gathered analyzed and how to reach the conclusion. Chapter four: Empirical findings Content: In this part of thesis research will be done with the help of annual reports of different organizations. The study will help in analyzing that how these organizations manage this risk and what techniques are used by them. Chapter five: Comparative Analysis Content: In this chapter we will compare the data gathered from different financial institutions and find out the managing methods used by them. Chapter six: Conclusions and Recommendations Content: this part will contain the summary of our findings, implication and results answering the research questions of existing theory. It will also contains the recommendation for future research that may evaluate this research 2. Literature Review It is the review of literature regarding the foreign exchange risk management. It also includes the concepts, characteristics by types and different methods of hedging this risk. 2.1 Foreign exchange risk 2.1.1 The concept of foreign exchange risk What is foreign exchange risk? Different authors and researchers define exchange risk in different ways. Niso abuaf defines à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“foreign exchange risk is the chance that fluctuation in the exchange rate will change the profitability of a transaction from its expected valueà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬?. (P.29)This definition is in terms of financial risk. Cornell and Shapiro (P.45) also define foreign exchange risk as à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“variability in the value of a firm as measured by the present value of its expected future cash flows, caused by uncertain exchange rate changes. In this definition both the researchers emphasize the firmà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s cash flows. Hekman (60) defines exchange risk in terms of control of firms as the possibility that operating and financial results may exceed or fall short of budget. Foreign exchange rate risk is the potential gain or loss resulting from a change in exchange rate. It is the risk arising from the adverse movements in exchange rate to the earnings and capital. It is the impact of adverse movement in currency exchange rate on the value of open foreign currency position. Banks faced this risk that arises from maturity mismatching of foreign currency positions. Banks also face the risk of failure to pay of counter party in foreign exchange business. While such type of risk crystallization does not cause primary loss, bank may undertake new transaction in cash/spot market for replacing the failed transactions. ____CGAP Portfolio, à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“Are MFIs Hedging Their Bets? Issue 1, April 2005 Major categories of exchange rate changes are given as follow: Depreciation: it is the ongoing decline in the value of currency in the relevance of another currency. Devaluation: it is the sharp fall in the value of currency in comparison of another currency. Appreciation: it is the gradual increase in the value of currency in comparison of another currency. For example, a financial institution that has no t managed its foreign exchange risk will Lose money through currency depreciation when the value of local currency falls as compared to the currency in which the liability is held. That is, if a financial institution say bank has borrowed in US Dollars and giving debt in local currency PKR will suffer a loss if the value of rupee falls against Dollars. It must have more PKR to service the Dollar based debt. 2.1.2 Classifications of foreign exchange risk Ankrom (1974) was the first writers who classify the foreign exchange risk in different categories. Many other writers and researcher also classified foreign exchange risk in different types. These authors include Walker (1978), Whilborg (1980), Dumas (1984), and Shapiro (1989). Following are three main kinds of foreign exchange risk, Translation exposure Transaction exposure Operating exposure These risks are further defined by Shapiro in 2006. à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“Translation exposure, also known as accounting exposure, arises from the need for purpose of reporting and consolidation, to convert the financial statements of foreign operations from the local currency (LC) involved to home currency (HC). If exchange rate has changed, liabilities revenues, expenses, gains and losses that are denominated in foreign currency will result in foreign exchange gain or loss.à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬? This exposure generally affects the balance sheet and those items of income statement that al ready exist. à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“Transaction risk, result from transactions that give rise to know, actually binding future foreign-currency-denominated cash inflows or cash outflows. As exchange rate change between now and when these transactions settle, so does the value of their associated foreign currency cash flow, leading to currency gains or losses.à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬? This exposure affects the cash flows of an organization which can be the result of an existing contractual obligation. For example this risk may affect the transactional account like receivables (export transactions) and payables (import transactions) or repatriation of dividends. à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“Operating exposure, measures the extent to which currency fluctuations can alter a companyà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s future operating cash flows, that is, its future revenues and costs. The firm faces operating exposure the moment it invests in servicing a market subject to foreign competition or in sourcing goods or inputs abro ad. This investment includes new-product development, a distribution network, foreign Supply contracts, or production facilities.à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬? This risk also affects cash flows but impacts revenues and costs associated with future sales. The combination of two exposures i.e transaction exposure and operating exposure is also called economic exposure as said by Shapiro. This economic exposure actually affects the firmà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s present value of future expected cash flows from exchange rate movement. Economic risk concerns the effect of exchange rate changes both on revenues (domestic sales and exports) and operating expenses (domestic input costs and imports). It is very crucial for firms to establish a strategy of managing the foreign exchange risk as they have the clear identification of various types of currency risks along with their measurement. 2.2 Measurement of foreign exchange risk For the multinational firms, they must have to face the foreign exchange risk. It is very important for them to exactly measure the foreign exposure faced by their organization. 2.2.1 Measurement of translation risk History describes four principals method for translation. These are given as follow: The current/non current method The monitory/non monitory method The temporal method The current rate method These can be understood from following table: Note: while translating the income statement sales revenues and interests are generally translated at average historical exchange rate that prevailed during the year, whereas depreciation is translated at appropriated historical rate. Cost of goods sold and some general and administrative expenses are translated at historical exchange rate and other items are translated at current rate. à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“Cà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬?= it stands for current rate. That means assets and liabilities are recorded at current prevailing rate. It is the rate at balance sheet date. à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“Hà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬?= it shows historical rate. Assets and liabilities are recorded at historical rate that was prevailed during the period. After knowing all the methods of translating the issue arises is that which method should be used among these four methods while translating? Financial accounting standard board (FASB) in its standard 8 which relates to the governance of treatment of translation of foreign currency financial statements from 1975 requires that organizations should use the temporal method for translation of financial statements and the resulting gain or loss from translation should be included in income statement. But this treatment was argued that this produced gains or losses which were not the economic reality of the organizationà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s business. So any hedging for this translation risk under this method seems not realistic meaning. From the invention of standard 52 published by Financial Accounting Standard Board to the end of 1981, which replaced the FAS 8, require that organizations must use the current rat method for translation purpose. FAS 52 introduced the functional currency, which is identified by each organization for basic economic environment and selected for each of the organizationà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s foreign entities. If the functional currency is foreign currency, the standard requirement is to use the current rate method for any translation gain and loss that is taken directly to the share holderà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s equity. Whereas if the functional currency is the parentà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s company currency, then the rule described by FAS 8 should follow. The above mentioned issues can be referred to the Adrian Buckleyà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s book named à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“Multinational Financeà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬? (2004) (P145-152). https://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~igiddy/fxrisk.htm, à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“The Management of Foreign Exchange Riskà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬? by Ian H. Giddy And Gunter Dufey 2.2.2 Measure of economic exposure as Adler and Dumas (1980,19840defined foreign exchange risk as the regression of assetà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s value on the exchange rate and recommended that exchange rate risk of organizations can be calculated by the sensitivity of stock return to exchange rate activities. Many other researchers like Popper (1997), Bodnar and Gentry (1993) And recently Martin and Mauer (2003, 2005), have been done to explore the foreign exchange exposure. Whereas Holton (2003) indicated that when measuring the foreign exchange risk is difficult it is due to the difficulty of measuring the economic risk. For the measurement of economic risk the method used is value-at-risk (VAR). in broader sense value at risk is defined as the maximum loss for a given risk over a given period of time with z% confidence. This definition was given by micheal papaioannou (2006). 2.3 Foreign Exchange Risk Management 2.3.1 Corporate Objectives of Risk Management After knowing the foreign exchange risk and its measurement faced by the organization, the company should choose to whether hedge this risk or not and further know how this risk should be managed. Oxelheim and wihlborg (1987) with mutual participation produced the idea of currency risk which is given as follow, à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“Risk aversion: it relates to the desire of reduction of variability of cash flows in businessà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬? à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“The target variable: in summaries form these are the efforts of the organization to maximize or to stabilize, measurement in accounting or cash flow, measurement in nominal or real terms.à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬? An effective foreign exchange risk management requires definite objectives viewing managementà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s approach toward the foreign exchange risk. The decision making of hedging or not to hedging the foreign exchange exposure depends upon the attitude of companyà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s management towards exchange risk management. Hedging strategy varies from organization to organization. Whenever there is a risk the risk aversion companies try to hedge this risk whereas the risk taking companiesà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢ leave this risk unhedged. This is the idea arises from management of financial risks that management of financial risk is unnecessary and the gain and loss is will at last equalize in term of equilibrium relationship in the international financial market. This idea was given by Dufey and Sirininasulu in 1984: à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“Foreign exchange risk does not exist; even if it exists, it need not be hedged; even it is to be hedged, corporations need not hedge it.à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬? It is the general concept that the organizations involved in exports and imports should hedge the risk of foreign risk exposure as a risk averse attitude. In real terms companies prefer to manage the risk within an acceptable limit instead of adopting neither of the two attitudes. Management should be in charge for ensuring to ta ke suitable and reasonable actions based on after-tax term to decrease the risk. 2.3.2 Theoretical appraisal of managing foreign exchange exposure it is the basic strategy of the organizations to hedge the foreign exposure that they increase hard currency assets and decrease the soft currency assets, at the same time decreasing the hard currency liabilities and increasing the soft currency liabilities. However, many debates relating to the hedge the translation exposure exist in finance literature. Pramborg (2002) pointed out that transaction exposure hedging comes to add value for Swedish companies whereas there is no value addition from translation exposure. Butler (1990) suggested that it support the general suggestion of the finance literature not to worry about this type of risk, so it might not be hedged. A reason for not hedging this risk is that translation exposure risk is uneconomic as it is based on historical book value and has no direct effect on organizationà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s cash flows. Thus organization should concern to the exposure faced to the cash flows. Earlier experimental studies by Belk and Glaum ( 1990) and Aobo (1999) who have investigated the foreign exchange risk management in UK and US multinationals, show that the management of transaction exposure is the focal point of company exchange risk management for the transaction risk control the real cash flows. As compared to translation and transaction risk operating risk is less defined and more difficult to manage. It could be defined as the sensitivity of an organizationà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s future cash flows to the unexpected change in foreign exchange rate and any change in aggressive environment caused by these currency movements. Belk and Glaum (1990) found that firms were less worried about the real impact of exchange rate varies on the competitive position of the companies. Bradley and Moles (2002) find that there is a strong relations ship between exchange rate sensitivity and the extent to which it sales, sources and funds itself worldwide. Shapiro (2006) argued that it could be concluded that organizationà ¢Ã¢â€ š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s operating exposure is attributed to distinguish a companyà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s product is, the internationaly expand its competitors is, the ability to shift production, the sourcing of inputs among countries, and the variation in real exchange rate. It is assumed that the firms more involved in foreign markets the greater would be the operating risk faced by the organization. Shapiro (2006) concluded that firms can easily hedge their transaction risk, competitive exposure (operating exposure) are long term and can not be dealt with exclusively through financial hedging techniques, they relatively require making the long term operating adjustment. Strategic reorientation of operating policies related to pricing, sources, location of production and financing needs not only financial managers but also requires the corporate managers. Moffet and Karlsen (1994) illustrate the use of production, financial and promotion policies to manage economic currency risk as natural hed ging. Being a part of globalization business environment, diversification of international operations is very important for multinational corporations to handle operating risk. So this can give the companies to maintain competitive advantage and protective reactions to unfavorable exchange rate changes. Whenever service cost or domestic production cost is affected by exchange rate changes as compared to those of producing in foreign country, the firm can move product sourcing from those countries whose currency is devalued or plant transfered there. Strategic marketing and production regulations in general are for à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã‹Å"cost-effectiveà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢. Another operational process used to hedge operating exposure is financial management, which are formating the firmà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s assets and liabilities. One option is to funding the portion of a firmà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s assets used to create export profits so that changes in foreign assets values caused by an exchange ra te change are compensate by virtual changes in the debt expense in the same currency. For example, a firm should hold debt in currency of a foreign country, in which the firm increases a considerable export market. Existing text such as Glaum (1990) suggests economic exposure management should be integrated into the long-range, strategic planning system of the corporation and included with all areas of corporate decision-making. Tools and techniques for foreign exchange risk management Nowadays foreign exchange risk could not only control a firmà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s quarterly earnings, but Also decide its survival. A variety of financial implements come into sight as the financial markets require managing the different increasing exposure that firms face. For Managing foreign exchange risk, there exist internal techniques such as matching inflows and outflows, inter-company netting of receipts and payments, transfer pricing agreement, etc, and external hedging tools involve the usage of different sorts of derivatives including forwards, futures, debt, options and swaps. Each of these techniques differs to hedge different exchange risk in each company situation. There have been many studies concerned with the effect from the use of these Currency derivatives, e.g. recent study as Allayannis and Ofek (2001), Bengt Pramborg (2002). Foreign exchange forwards A forward foreign exchange contract is a contract to exchange one currency for another with a particular amount, where the exchange rate is fixed on the day of the contract but the actual exchange takes place on a fixed date in the future. The predetermined exchange rate is also known as the forward exchange rate. The amount of the contract, the value date, the payments method, and the exchange rate are all mentioned in contract at the time of contract. Forward contracts in major currencies are available on daily basis with maturities of up to 30-, 90-, and 180-day. Two types of forwards contracts are often used: deliverable forwards (face amount of currency is exchanged on settlement date) and non-deliverable forwards (which are settled on a net cash basis). A currency forward contract is usually used to hedge exchange risks that ranges from short to medium term and whose timing is known for certainty. It is so important for Firmà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s treasurers to dea l in the forward market that they can fix the costs of imports and exports in advance for the payable or receivable amount and hedge the exchange risk. A lot of experimental researches such as Belk et al. (1992), Bodnar et al. (1995), Mallin et al (2000) and Pramborg (2002) pointed out that the most commonly used method is forward exchange contract. With forwards, the firm can be totally hedged. However, some exposures including settlement risk that exchange rate shift in the opposite direction as they predicted, and counter party risk which the other party is unable to perform the contract. Sometimes the high cost of forward contracts prevent Firms to implement this instrument to fully hedge their exchange exposure. For that reason, futures are more beneficial. Currency futures Currency future is another tool to decrease the exposure of foreign exchange instability It is an exchange-traded agreement specifying a standard amount of a particular currency to be replaced on a specific future payment date. It is likely to forward contract in a way that they permit a firm to buy or sell definite currency at a fixed price and at a future time. So far, there are some differences among these two sorts of practices. One of the futures distinctiveness vary from forward is that futures are standardized both for amount and payment date (normally March, June, September and December), whereas Forwards are for any amount and any delivery date upon which the two parties are agreed. One more difference is that forwards are dealt by phone and telex and are completely independent of locality or time while all clearing functions for futures markets are hold by an exchange clearing house. The biggest difference is in terms of liquidation that futures contr acts are settled by balancing of gains and losses for each day, whereas forward contracts are settled by real delivery whether full delivery of the two Currencies or net value only at the contract maturity. Giddy and Dufey said à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“This daily cash compensation attribute mostly eliminates default risk.à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬? Futures market and forward market both are of most important ways to hedge risk. David Tien (2002) pointed out à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“Firms uncomfortable with the uncertainty involved in receiving a fixed payment in foreign currency can easily hedge the transaction using either futures or forward contracts.à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬? Some studise as Belk and Glaum (1992) establish that none of the firms which were talked used currency futures, because the standardized features of exchange traded futures most often do not enable the companies to hedge their positions completely. Mallin et al (2000) also found that only 9 companies out of 231 respondents to their s urvey used currency futures. Giddy and Dufey conclude that à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã…“forwards and futures serve similar purposes, and tend to have identical rates, but differ in their applicabilityà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬?. The largest part of big companies use forwards; futures tend to be used whenever exchange risk may be a problem. Currency options A foreign exchange option which is dissimilar from currency forward agreements and currency futures is to give the possessor of the contract the right to buy or sell a definite amount of a certain currency at a prearranged price (also called strike or exercise price) until or on a specified date, but he is not bound to do so. The seller of a currency option has obligation to execute the contract. The right to buy is a call position and the right to sell is a put position. There is option premium required to pay by those who acquire such a right. The holder of a call option can take advantage from a price increases (profit is the difference between the market price and the strike price plus the premium), while can choose not to exercise the right when the price decreases (locked in loss of the option premium). Vice versa is the situation for the holder of a put option. For the advantages of simplicity, elasticity, lower cost than the forwards, and the expected maximum lo ssà ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â‚¬ which is up to the premium paid to acquire the right , the currency option has become growing popular as a hedging tool to protect firms against the exchange rate movements. Whenever there is insecurity in the size of cash flows and the timing of cash flows, currency option agreements would be better to conventional hedging instruments such as forward contracts and futures contracts. Grant and Marshall (1997) observed the degree of derivative use and the motives for their use by carried out surveys in 250 large UK companies, found that a extensive use of both forwards and options(respectively 96% and 59%). They pointed that comparing the most important reasons for the use of forwards were company policy, business reasons and risk aversion, A good understanding of instrument, and price were prominent while the primary reasons to use option for company management. Currency swaps As a virtually new financial derivative used to hedge foreign exchange exposure, currency swaps have a rapid advancement. Since its introduction on a global scale is in the early 1980à ¢Ã¢â€š ¬Ã¢â€ž ¢s, currency swaps market has turn into one of the leading financial derivative markets in the world. A currency swap is a foreign exchange agreement among two parties to exchange a given amount of one currency for another and, after a particular period of time, to give back the original amounts exchanged. It can be negotiated for a broad range of maturities up to at least 10 years, and can be regarded as a series of forward contracts. It is normally used under such circumstances that a firm functions in one currency but need to borrow in another currency. Currency swaps are frequently connected with interest rate swaps, as the common cross currency swaps the cross-currency coupon swap which is to pay fixed and get floating interest sum meantime buying the currency swap. Another generally used one is cross currency basis swap which is to pay floating interest in a currency and receive floating interest in another currency. The benefit of currency swaps is to facilitate each contracting part to borrow in their relative constructive market, and both parties can benefit from the swaps by lessening the borrowing costs. The use of swaps now has developed rapidly in western countries such as Grant and Marshall (1997) found that the use of swaps and forwards/futures is dominant in UK, Bodnar et al. (1995) found that swaps govern for interest rate risk management in US.

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros Essay example

The House on Mango Street, is written by Sandra Cisneros. Sandra Cisneros was born and grew up in Chicago. She was raised by her mother and father who were both of Mexican descent. She grew up in a relatively large family; she was the third child out of seven children. Cisneros’ childhood consisted of her growing up in one of Chicago’s Puerto Rican neighborhoods. As a child she also traveled back and forth to Mexico with her family. Understanding Cisneros’ background is important for understanding the novel because the main character in the novel, Esperanza, shares many similarities and almost resembles Cisneros. The House on Mango Street is composed of many chapters; these chapters are written as short descriptions that have been†¦show more content†¦The family’s new home is located in the center of a crowded Latino neighborhood in Chicago, also very similar to the up-bringing of Cisneros. Chicago is important to the setting of the story and to understanding the underlining meanings, because Chicago is a city where many of the poor areas are racially segregated. As soon as she arriving to her new home Esperanza promises herself that she will someday leave Mango Street and have a house all her own, a house which resembles the American dream, white fence, and huge yard. During the year covered in the novel Esperanza matures significantly, both in a sexual and emotional manner. The novel as it is broken into chapters, short stories, almost charts and illustrates her life as she makes friends, develops her first crush, and endures sexual assault. The charting of Esperanza life is mainly done through the stories of many of Esperanza’s neighbors. The stories giving a full picture of the neighborhood and the life which Esperanza is living on a day to day basis. It’s interesting because many of the stories, specially of the women in Esperanza’s neighborhood, allows the reader to assume that the lives of these women, which include abuse, male dominance, and lack of freedom are all possible outcomes and paths of Esperanza’s future. After moving to the house, Esperanza quickly becomes friends with Lucy and Rachel, two girls whom are also Mexican-American and who live only across the street from her. Lucy, Rachel, Esperanza,Show MoreRelatedThe House On Mango Street By Sandra Cisneros1132 Words   |  5 Pageslives. In the collection of short stories, The House on Mango Street, by Sandra Cisneros, she focuses on a young Hispanic girl named Esperanza Cordero who grew up on Mango Street. As she is changing and maturing, she writes down her experiences about discrimination of gender, sexual orientation, and more. Esperanza s transformation from a young and innocent girl to a mature woman is displayed through her self-realization and experiences that help Cisneros reveal how one s own experiences can lead toRead MoreThe House On Mango Street By Sandra Cisneros1297 Words   |  6 Pagesto think of a story to create, most of the advice given to them is â€Å"write what you know.† This was perfect advice for Mexican-American writer Sandra Cisneros, who draws upon her coming-of-age events throughout her childhood and adolescence in â€Å"The House on Mango Street.† Drawing from life stories, her alter ego â€Å"Esperanza† describes everything from the house she lived in, to the hair on people’s heads. These personal stories show a stark contrast for any reader of a different culture, and confirmRead MoreThe House On Mango Street By Sandra Cisneros913 Words   |  4 Pagesvignettes that made up â€Å"The House on Mango Street†, a coming-of-age novel by Mexican-American writer Sandra Cisneros. Cisneros in this specific vignette reveals the inherent oppressiveness of all marriages, which by their nature rob people of their independence. Sally is not even eight grades and she gets married. Her husband is a marshmallow salesman that she meets at a school bazaar. She moves to another state where is legal their marriage. Sally tells Esperanza about her house and domestic objects thatRead MoreThe House On Mango Street By Sandra Cisneros1854 Words   |  8 Pages The Street That Changed a Life The House on Mango Street, by Sandra Cisneros, displays a great emphasis on culture and people helping form a young girl into a young lady. The main character, Esperanza, has to navigate a mentally and physically challenging life growing up in a poor, Hispanic neighborhood while still learning how to mature and rise above the poverty that surrounds her. Thus, the question arises: in what way and to what extent does close human interaction change Esperanza’s lifeRead MoreThe House On Mango Street By Sandra Cisneros886 Words   |  4 PagesThe House on Mango Street is a novel by Sandra Cisneros. The novel is acclaimed by critics and used in schools all around the world. â€Å"The House on Mango Street† is about a young Latina girl who is about the age of 12 when the novel begins. Sandra’s novels have sold over two million copies. Sandra was born on December 20, 1984, in Chicago, Illinois. In 2016, President Barack Obama presented her with the medal of ‘Nat ional Medal of Arts’. Title: The House on Mango Street Author: Sandra Cisneros TheRead MoreThe House On Mango Street By Sandra Cisneros2004 Words   |  9 PagesIn The House on Mango Street, by Sandra Cisneros, twelve-year-old Esperanza Cordero must navigate through the trials and tribulations that one can associate when encountering young adulthood. The author Cisneros, utilizes her unique writing style of vignettes to illustrate the narrative voice of Esperanza in her text. A major theme that can be seen as the most prominent thus far, is on the feminist role of Esperanza as a female in her Latin American culture. The House on Mango Street is an overallRead MoreThe House On Mango Street By Sandra Cisneros753 Words   |  4 PagesWhen you look at the cover of the book, The House on Mango Street, you see bright colors and a fun font. The first vignette that Sandra Cisneros writes is about Esperanza, a young Latino girl wishing that she had her own house, a house with trees and white fences. The way that Cisneros writes screams â€Å"little girl.† Howe ver, as you dive deeper into the book, the subject of each vignette gets darker. Slowly, we start to see the dangers of growing up as a young Latino girl in a Chicago neighborhoodRead MoreThe House On Mango Street By Sandra Cisneros1688 Words   |  7 PagesThe House on Mango Street, a novella by Sandra Cisneros, revolves around the idea of a developing Latino girl facing the difficulties of transitioning to a young mature woman. Esperanza moves into a house on Mango Street, where she meets many diverse influential people as she attempts to discover her true identity and understanding of the world. While doing this, she encounters the struggles of her community, socioeconomic class, and heritage. Esperanza’s opposing view of herself slowly adjusts asRead MoreThe House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros766 Words   |  3 Pagesliterary analysis on â€Å"The House on Mango Street† by Sandra Cisneros. This story takes place in the center of an over populated Latino neig hborhood in Chicago, a city where many of the poor areas are ethnically segregated. This novella uses two main symbols shoes and trees. Later in the literary analysis I will explain what these mean to the main characters. There are three main characters in the novella Esperanza, Sally and Nenny (short for â€Å"Magdalena†). The House on Mango Street tells the life of EsperanzaRead MoreThe House On Mango Street By Sandra Cisneros1087 Words   |  5 PagesRiaz Salehi The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros, portrays the life of a teenage girl named Esperanza living on Mango Street. Though Esperanza lives in a diverse city, pre-existing stereotypes are affecting how others(women?) are perceived and treated. Esperanza starts to see how to change her community and the negative view of herself by taking the wrong actions of other women and connecting them to her own life experiences. To begin with, Esperanza always saw this great distinction

Monday, December 23, 2019

The Lord Of The s Church - 916 Words

The Lord’s Church When the Lord came with his disciples to the coast of Caesarea Philippi, He asked His disciples what people were saying about Him. (Matt. 16:13) They answered that some were saying He was John the Baptist and others thought He was Elijah or Jeremiah. (Matt. 16:14) Then He turned to those disciples and asks them, â€Å"But who do you say that I am†? Peter spoke up and said, â€Å"Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Living God.† (Matt. 16: 15-16) And then, the Lord made a statement that has been the grounds for countless theological battles from then until now. He said, â€Å"Blessed art thou, Simon Barjona: for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but My Father which is in heaven. And I say unto thee, thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it† (Matt. 16:17-18). Some have thought the Lord said that He was going to build His church on Peter; however, the Lord was not referring to Peter when He said that He would build His church upon this rock. Although the word Peter (Petros) and the word rock (Petra) are derived from the same root word, there is a difference in their meaning. The Greek word which is translated Peter (petros) signifies a fragment or a piece of a rock. The word rock (Petra) comes from a word meaning a solid massive rock. And; furthermore, the gender of the two words is not the same. The word Peter is masculine in gender while the gender of the word rock is feminine.Show MoreRelatedThe Holy And Resurrection Of Jesus Christ995 Words   |  4 Pagesthe Church who, like a bride, awaits her groom. The eschatological reality of the coming Kingdom of God, inaugurated in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, presently breaks forth to forms the Church for its mission. As Aleksandr Schmemann writes, â€Å"the Church itself is a leitourgia, a ministry, a calling to act in this world after the fashion of Christ, to bear testimony to Him and His kingdom.†1 This leitourgia is embodied in the central practice of the Church, instituted by the Lord, theRead MoreThe Nature Of The Christian Mission1601 Words   |  7 PagesGreat Commission of our Lord Jesus Christ created by God the Father. There has been a long tradition that sees the mission of the Church primarily as obedience to a command (Newbigin, 1989). It also arises out of the historical fact of Christ’s resurrection. To just put it, the Christian mission is to reach out to people groups, those indigenous cultures that are without a Gospel witness. It is the purpose of the body of Christ to be obedience to the instructions of our Lord and Savior. 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If a believer is called to church plant, he must fit the qualifications in order to successfully carry out this great work for the Lord. Some of the qualifications are, he a good man, he is led by the Holy Spirit, and he is strong in his faith in God. According toRead MoreMarriage Comparison Of Corinthians And Ephesians893 Words   |  4 Pagesthese hard sayings could cause us to have a skewed view of marriage without the proper understanding of what God truly meant through exegesis and hermeneutical study. In 1 Corinthians 7: 1-17, Paul is dealing with a situation that is plaguing the church. There was much sexual immorality and dysfunction in the liberal way that the Corinthians viewed marriage. 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Prior to this conversion experience, he, Saul of Tarsus, was a fierce persecutor of anyone who was a disciple of the Lord. He traveled with the intention of hunting down as many followers of the Way as possible at Damascus and bringing them back to Jerusalem as prisoners. However, the Risen Lord manifested HimselfRead MoreJesus Is The Name Of The Word1383 Words   |  6 Pagesin John 4:42. The title Nazarene applied to Jesus has been also used to describe Christians in Syria and Arabic traditions. Although some of the terms and titles referring to Jesus in both New and Old Testament have deeper meaning such as: Emmanuel, Lord, Messiah and son of man. The Gospel of Matthew provides the name Emmanuel, which is taken from Isaiah 7:14, where it refers to another child born during the reign of Ahaz. The name Emmanuel or Immanuel of the Hebrew which means God is with us consistsRead MoreFeudalism in Europe and Japan Essay738 Words   |  3 Pagesthe feudal system formed because local warlords battled with each other for territory and power. Power and wealth were what made lords in both civilizations powerful and peasants vulnerable. Both kings and emperors of Japan and Europe remained as figureheads, but the people who really controlled the nations were the lords and their armies. The lord in Europe had lesser lords called vassals, who had knights to protect them. The shogun was the actual ruler in Japan and they gave out land to landownersRead MoreCan Establishment Be Consistent With Religious Freedom?1244 Words   |  5 Pagesreligion could be established by law in relation to s 116 of the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act 1900. The first example, of which Gibbs J said was the widest meaning was simply to protect the religion by law, an example of this, is that Queen Elizabeth II is the ‘Defender of the Faith’. The second example is to confer on a religion the status of state religion, for example the Church of England. The third example is to support a church a church in the observance of its ordinances and doctrines

Sunday, December 15, 2019

Development Of The Shoulder Arthroplasty Health And Social Care Essay Free Essays

string(152) " the articulations of dishes from head burden from head burden is the consequence of joint prosthetic device relaxation after one of the chief grounds\." Like the hip, the shoulder includes a ball and socket articulation. The replacing of the shoulder articulation is the operation which occupies the 3rd topographic point among common joint replacing, merely after replacing of the hip and articulatio genus articulations. Historically, shoulder replacing has a clear and defined objective which to reconstruct or retroflex the bone of the glenohumeral and the rotator turnup. We will write a custom essay sample on Development Of The Shoulder Arthroplasty Health And Social Care Essay or any similar topic only for you Order Now The nature of shoulder arthroplasty is the most complex articulation Reconstruction in the human organic structure. It need see the factors of figure and fluctuation. With the development of surgical techniques and clinical doctors recognize, shoulder joint anatomy engineering has made important advancement. With the development of surgical techniques and clinical doctors recognize, shoulder joint anatomy engineering has made appreciable advancement. The modem epoch of shoulder replacing is no more than thirty old ages old range to present society. The conventional entire shoulder arthroplasty ( TSA ) achieves this end that it brings significantly improves map for many patients and reduces pain they suffer. The cost of wellness attention is increasing every twelvemonth. There is a turning demand that the costs of intervention be justified by proved measuring of quality of life betterment. In finding the appropriate use for joint replacing surgery, and therefore specifying its function in the intervention of degenerative upsets, effectiveness rating is critical. Regional fluctuations in the frequence of joint replacing processs and the deficiency of consensus sing many facets of related patient attention, which have spurred involvement in the methodological analysis of surgical results research. The purpose is to better specify the function of specific interventions through valid, evidence-based clinical result and epidemiological surveies. 1 The development of the shoulder arthroplasty The history of shoulder replacing can be dated from late nineteenth century France. A Parisian tooth doctor, J. Michael Porter, who designed pean unreal shoulder which successful dainty a patient whose shoulder was already tubercular infection. This operate can be classified as an original implant in the country of glenoid part. ( Lugli, 1978 ) In 1953, the Neer produced vanadium unreal humeral caput prosthetic device to handle humerus near terminal comminuted break and the consequence achieved satisfactory healing consequence. From now shoulder arthroplasty began to be widely used in clinical intervention. The technique advanced highly rapidly in following few old ages. Since half shoulder arthroplasty ( besides called unreal humeral caput prosthetic device replacing, hemi-arthroplasty, HA ) successful treated humeral breaks near terminal, this technique applied the range of the shoulder joint replacing bit by bit spread to osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis. This operation does n on handle the shoulder articulation disease that the both sides of the articulate surface caput of the humerus and glenoid pit have been broken. In 1970s, Neer added polythene glenoid pit prosthetic device on the unreal humeral caput prosthetic device, in order to develop the first coevals which is Neera†¦ entire shoulder prosthetic device system. Because the glenoid pit prosthetic device can easy be abraded, loosed and shoulder joint replacing inspection and repair engineering non mature, clinical applications tend to utilize HA, but there are besides glenoid pit abrasion job. Biological surface angioplasty began to clinical applications in 1988, ( Krishnan SG, 2007 ) in order to supply a method to work out glenoid pit bring by the wear job of the humeral HA prosthetic device. At the same clip, other types of the shoulder joint replacing engineering besides begins to look and use, such as unreal humeral caput prosthetic device surface replacing, shoulder arthroplasty somersaul t angioplasty, and so on. At present shoulder arthroplasty has become a preferable method to handle most patients suffer from diseases of end-stage shoulder arthritis and humerus near terminal comminuted break. The current research chiefly focused on the humeral caput prosthetic device and glenoid pit prosthetic design, in order to cut down glenoid pit wear. 2 the caput of the humerus prosthetic device replacing position Shoulder joint prosthetic device design for the chief portion of the caput of the humerus. The survey found that the curvature radius of the caput of the humerus was inconsistent, in each subdivision on the consecutive size is non the same. Now the caput of the humerus prosthetic device design is the caput of the humerus diameter and thickness correlativity coefficient as 0.75 ( Gregory T, 2007 ) The size of the caput of false organic structure and the shoulder articulation stabilisation straight relate to the strength of environing musculus in shoulder arthroplasty. Not suited prosthetic device caput will impact the caput of the humerus normal centre of rotary motion, change the shoulder articulation lever arm about, so that the musculus map alteration, causes a shoulder to shoulder, environing soft tissue hurt replacing failure. So first of all should take appropriate false figure figure to reconstruct the humerus near terminal anatomy, so as Reconstruction of soft tissue around th e balance ( Yuan benxiang, 2005 ) . Normal shoulder the caput of the humerus and glenoid pit are non fiting, glenoid pit surface curvature radius is bigger than the curvature radius of caput of the humerus 2 ~ 3 millimeter, and the being of articular gristle and dishes lip in do them both basic matching. Shoulder arthroplasty â€Å" mismatch † refers to curvature radius of the caput of the humerus prosthetic device and glenoid pit prosthetic device are different, the ratio between them called consistent index, research shows that when the index is 0.80 ~ 0.88, joint stableness is best ( Anglin C, 2001 ) . It is considered that it will be better if the glenoid pit and the caput of the humerus prosthetic device in shoulder arthroplasty are wholly fiting from some theories, but in pattern most bookmans believe that do non fit more contributing to the stableness of the shoulder. The ground include two chief point: one is that does non fit the design can be in prosthetic device disruption happened when half the extra burden transportation to the environing soft tissue, cut down direct action in the articulations of dishes from head burden from head burden is the consequence of joint prosthetic device relaxation after one of the chief grounds. You read "Development Of The Shoulder Arthroplasty Health And Social Care Essay" in category "Essay examples" The 2nd point is that the comparatively little caput of the humerus false physical lessening abrasion atom coevals. The design and choice of caput of the humerus prosthetic device depends on the length and the mush pit breadth. Medullary pit breadth and humeral diameter relate to the thickness of the cerebral mantle, seemingly show approximately broad at the top and narrow in the underside. When intraoperative to the full enlarge mush aid prosthetic device grip with the environing bone, and to recognize the full contact force per unit area distribution better, better prosthetic device handle stableness. At present, although the 3rd coevals of anatomical type prosthetic device system already can good better the forecast of patients. Through the betterment of the caput of the humerus prosthetic device, prosthetic device single adaptability increased, shoulder map and the quality of life improved. 2.2 the caput of the humerus prosthetic device fixed engineering The caput of the humerus prosthetic device grip fixed means has bone cement and the bone cement two. Bone cement into the bone cement and close terminal bone cement fixed engineering, non-bone cement is divided into force per unit area with fixed and compression bone grafting. 3 glenoid pit prosthetic device replacing position Glenoid pit prosthetic device has been use as clinical applications for 30 old ages, but it is still controversial. In the shoulder arthroplasty after usage joint prosthetic device will non merely increase the operation clip, intraoperative sum of hemorrhage and operation trouble, and a series of postoperative complications may happen, particularly glenoid pit prosthetic device relaxation. Glenoid pit prosthetic device relaxation is the consequence of operation failure, demand to make shoulder joint replacing surgery is one of the chief grounds for the alteration. 3.1 glenoid pit the applied anatomy and prosthetic device design Glenoid pit prosthetic device ideal design is to recognize anatomical Reconstruction, glenoid pit the applied anatomy and biomechanics belongings of the prosthetic device design has an of import function. At present there are chiefly the undermentioned difference: ( 1 ) the glenoid pit prosthetic stuff: all sorts of polyethylene prosthetic device and metal pat of polyethylene prosthetic device. ( 2 ) The form of the glenoid pit, Due to the glenoid pit bone mass less, addition with age will do bone loss, and patterned advance of disease cause bone defect, and glenoid pit signifier will be altered evidently, increase the trouble of the anatomical Reconstruction. In order to recognize the anatomical Reconstruction, bookmans design the ultra-high molecular weight polythene cuneus gasket to counterbalance for defect, preoperative adopts modern imaging engineering after bone and joint harm, right rating, in order to run into the single intervention. Glenoid pit prosthetic device nidation m anner: joint prosthetic device after implant place to action in bone cement bed emphasis and glenoid pit prosthetic device have obvious influence on the burden, prosthetic Angle can besides impact the caput of the humerus in glenoid pit prosthetic device place [ 16 ] . The survey found that the glenoid pit and shoulder blade organic structure between axis Angle, Angle in the forward 2 A ° and pour 7 A ° between, after an norm of 1.23 A ° pour, glenoid pit prosthetic device downward inclining a hitter to cut down the caput of the humerus prosthetic displacement, so glenoid pit prosthetic device nidation in moderate backward, downward inclining can break cut down partial head burden, and false organic structure wear and loose ( Yuan benxiang, 2005 ) 3.2 glenoid pit prosthetic device fixed engineering Glenoid pit prosthetic fixed engineering harmonizing to the fixed manner into bone cement and the bone cement, harmonizing to the prosthetic device design patterns into bolt fixed and stagger fixed. At present most bookmans think bone cement is non bone cement fixed more stable house. Neer design application foremost glenoid pit prosthetic device is made from polyethylene stuffs, ellipse, curved back, the bone cement and stagger fixed, after 30 old ages of survey the proficient betterment is really little. Pure polythene, bone cement fixed, arc line drive prosthetic device design still is the best pick, the difference is bolt fixed than stagger fixed more stable. 4 other technological advancement 4.1 glenoid pit biological surface angioplasty In the presence of glenoid pit prosthetic device relaxation and pure HA the glenoid pit wear, glenoid pit biological surface angioplasty began to clinical applications. It is in the footing of HA will joint capsule, wide facia, Achilles tendon or semilunar cartilage and organ transplant fixed on glenoid pit, and â€Å" file dishes and activities to reshape † engineering. The angioplasty is chiefly used in immature and middle-aged patients, but compared with the TSA its healing consequence is unsure. Krishnan reported the shoulder arthritis utilizing glenoid pit biological surface angioplasty intervention after five old ages, it was found that glenoid pit of wear and tear visible radiation, the caput of the humerus prosthetic device stableness, did non happen secondary to false organic structure wear and the dishes brachial arthritis, shoulder articulation map is good. They think the glenoid pit biological surface angioplasty can obtain and TSA similar clinical results. The operation that immature patients and to shoulder joint map demanding patients has a opportunity to go through a comparatively long recuperation achieve good shoulder articulation map recovery, and to avoid a joint prosthetic device nidation after the hazards of, but still necessitate farther measure its effectivity and persistent. By utilizing this engineering is still need to be s olved such as transplant stuff beginning, its lastingness, surgical hurt jobs such as large. The development of tissue technology make it go the solution of this job is one of the most effectual ways. 4.2 shoulder joint replacing alteration processs Shoulder arthroplasty can look for shoulder hurting worse and functional restrictions, need to shoulder joint replacing alteration processs. Neer will be its ground loosely grouped into the undermentioned three facets: [ 2 ] : ( 1 ) the hapless preoperative status, such as rotator turnup hurt, infection, etc. ; ( 2 ) the operation and the false organic structure of complications, such as during the operation, the structural harm, anatomical Reconstruction failure ; ( 3 ) the jobs, such as rehabilitation exercising, hapless dishes brachial joint continued instability. HA postoperative lead to pass the most common ground is glenoid pit wear, TSA for dishes brachial joint continued instability and glenoid pit prosthetic device relaxation 5 the market of shoulder articulation replacing The cost of wellness attention is increasing every twelvemonth. There is a turning demand that the costs of intervention be justified by proved measuring of quality of life betterment. In finding the appropriate use for joint replacing surgery, and therefore specifying its function in the intervention of degenerative upsets, effectiveness rating is critical. Entire joint replacing has become a feasible option for immature, middle-aged, and aged patients who want to prolong athletically active life styles. Although shoulder arthroplasty can break easiness serious shoulder joint disease patients clinical symptoms and better with shoulder map, but at present the application more focal point on low to the map demand of the aged patients. And in the clinical pattern of many immature and middle-aged patients because of the serious harm to the same shoulder surgery. The traditional surgery, ankle arthrodesis and joint operation from off the serious influence shoulder articulation map and pa tient quality of life, immature and middle-aged patients to joint functional demand is high, the more hope the shoulder arthroplasty. To handle immature and middle-aged patients with shoulder joint replacing, clinicians ever hold more conservative. on the one manus, because of the shoulder articulation is the whole organic structure of big articulations activity scope biggest articulations, its activity strength, more easy to do prosthetic device relaxation and wear, particularly glenoid pit false organic structure parts, shorten the prosthetic device life ; On the other manus because of shoulder articulation inspection and repair engineering non mature. But there are besides clinicians claims for immature and middle-aged patients with shoulder arthroplasty, because: ( 1 ) Tell from the map upper limbs than lower limbs are more likely to avoid weight factors, can cut down false organic structure wear ; ( 2 ) from the surgery manner, ankle arthrodesis and joint from off the shoulder articulation map BASIC is lost, the serious influence patients quality of life, and shoulder arthroplasty can maintain a certain extent with shoulder map, better the quality of life. Burroughs [ 31 ] on 19 instances of average age, 38.6 old ages of the immature and middle-aged patients with shoulder joint replacing therapy, after a average followup of 5.6 old ages, and from diseases and surgical types of categorization treatment. The consequences showed that patients postoperative shoulder articulation map and quality of life improved, no postoperative shoulder articulation map impairment, and TSA is HA has good healing consequence. Sperling [ 32 ] reported so far the longest followup were the consequences of the survey, this survey included 78 patients with HA and 36 instances of patients with TSA, age are lt ; fifty old ages old, and a average followup of 16.8 old ages. The consequences showed that HA and TSA on hurting alleviation and functional betterment of all can obtain long -run, steady consequence, HA a TSA in quality of life better healing consequence, but the outlook of life is comparatively short and overhaul rate is higher. He thought that should be based on the single state of affairs of patients with disease patterned advance and take the right manner of replacing. At present shoulder arthroplasty can do immature and middle-aged patients get better and stable forecast, But for the immature and middle-aged patients with TSA or HA, is still controversial. At present, the shoulder arthroplasty is still has many jobs, the chosen replacing engineering, fixed method and stuffs to acquire the best healing consequence, still necessitate big multicenter randomized controlled tests and long-run follow-up observation. A hot topographic point in the survey of many focal point on glenoid pit portion ; Shoulder joint prosthetic device system are largely based on western people study design, with the popularisation and application of engineering in our state, how to plan a more suited for China ‘s patients with shoulder articulation prosthetic device system ; Whether can utilize tissue technology theory and material better work out the glenoid pit surface angioplasty are faced with the job ; For joint map of the high demand on the immature and middle-aged patients, how can break better the long-run forecast. All these need farther research to better and corroborate. LUGLI, TOMASO M.D, Artificial Shoulder Joint by Pean ( 1893 ) : The Facts of an Exceptional Intervention and the Prosthetic Method, Clinical Orthopaedics A ; Related Research: June 1978 – Volume 133 – Issue – ppg 215-218 Krishnan SG, Nowinski RJ, Harrison D, et Al. Humeral hemiarthro plasty with biologic resurfacing of the glenoid for glenohumeral arthritis-Two to fi fteen-year results. J Bone Joint Surg ( Am ) , 2007, 89 ( 4 ) : 727-734. Gregory T, Hansen U, Emery RJ, et Al. Developments in shoulder arthroplasty. Proc Inst Mech Eng H, 2007, 221 ( 1 ) : 87-96. e ¬c , e‘?e†¹Ã‚ ±? µÃ‚ · . e‚ ©a†¦?eS‚a?†c†?e §?a†°-a?Za?†¡a?â€Å"e ®?e ®? . aa?Sec §Ã¢â‚¬ËœÃ¢â‚¬Å¡a?- , 2005, 8 ( 6 ) : 571-573. Anglin C, Wyss UP, Nyffeler RW, et Al. Loosening public presentation of cemented glenoid prosthetic device design brace. Clin Biomech ( Bristol, Avon ) , 2001, 16 ( 2 ) : 144-150. Boileau P, Avidor C, Krishnan SG, et Al. Cemented polyethylene versus uncemented metal-backed glenoid constituents in entire shoulder arthroplasty: A prospective double-blind, randomized survey. J Shoulder Elbow Surg, 2002, 11 ( 4 ) : 351-359. How to cite Development Of The Shoulder Arthroplasty Health And Social Care Essay, Essay examples

Saturday, December 7, 2019

Ontology of Computing Process and Epistemology

Question: Discuss about the Ontology of Computing Process and Epistemology. Answer: Introduction This project report is working with the theory of Positive Accounting Theory. This is also known as PAT; basically these are the theories which define the accountants behaviour. The name Positive Accounting Theory is given by the Zimmerman and Watts. In this theory, behaviour of human being towards the settings of accounts has explained. This theory is used to define and assume the facts of general accepted accounting principles (Baker, 2011). This positive accounting theory is supposed to be a common theory which defines the accountant behaviour in an extended form. Positive accounting theory is somewhere related with the EMH (Efficient Market Hypothesis) which is considered as root of the positive accounting theory. Positive accounting theory is considered as the very useful and which is utilised on regular basis by the people who are worried by the accounting policy effects and the organization status. But it is defined below that this theory also have various limitations and only by using positive accounting theory, company cannot accomplish its business objective as it does not seem to be as productive as it seems. The main objective of assessing PAT is to recognize and talk over the issues and related theories in the given articles by the author Paul V Dunmore in the book Half a Defence of Positive Accounting Research. In this paper, information like strength and weaknesses will be discussed with the structure of summary, questionnaire, articles structure along with limitation, theoretical outline and at last it is being finished with the conclusion. The base of this project report is accounting and in this article accounting positive approaches are being focused. In this report, overall analysis of accounting theories will be done including the questionnaire on the scientific theories status. There are many faults which have been figured out in this theory that doubts on the significance of this theory. According to this theory, it is assumed that managers of the organization are more prominent part as compared with the companys shareholders and only managers can take important decisions regarding the profitable activities of the organization. In this theory, the normal behaviour of human being is being discussed including accountings epistemology and ontology (Cooper and Humphry, 2012). This theory seems like powerful but after implications it has various limitations. In this paper, illustrations has also included through the better articles in order to understand the concept in proper manner. It is assumed that this theory at present is not able to achieve the scientific purposes (Martin, 2010). Evaluation has been done on the basis of accounting theories through which their effectiveness can be identified. Various processing has completed in this project report like model testing regarding its construction. In this paper, the usage of hypothesis testing has been evaluated which is done by the scholars into the process of decision making. It is suggested through the theoretical discussion on this articles defines that positive research is being performed in the accounting and on which basis scientists concluded that this research is not able to accomplish the specified scientific aim (Beise and Sherr, 2015). Research Questionnaire Does this research and theories are based on accounting are sufficient in order to deliver constant base for the decision maker? In research activities and in organizational functions, there are various situations arise in which decision makers have to make correct decision in order to accomplish the ongoing operation. So, with the help of existing framework and research of accounting, issues and problems of accounting models users can be solved (Lambert, 2010). Do researchers can do the sufficient research regarding positive accounting concepts? In the method of positive accounting research, only quantitative model is used. There are some quantitative models and by using these models researchers can make better decision. Whether there are trustworthy techniques for measurement which can be applied to test accounting research frameworks theoretical models? An additional question arises here and also important to be answered- Are the techniques trustworthy or adequate enough in order to do proper testing of theoretical models. For that reason an important question arise here is related to the acceptability of measurement techniques so that testing in accounting research framework for theoretical models can be done properly. Theoretical Framework Theoretical framework can be defined as a structure which supports or embraces theory of research study. A theory is introduced or described with the help of theoretical framework which enlightens why the research problem exist in the study. Through theoretical framework a basis can be framed with help off some theories to prove something or to elucidate any problem in research whether accounting research or any other research (Bouaziz, Ambroise and Guedj, 2011). In this article, different theoretical frameworks which are used to support the research are as follows: Human agency theory- In this article, human agency theory is being studied and established. Responsibilities, roles and practices follows by human to build societies are defined and identified with the help of human agency theory. A society is established by humans only, as if there are no human interactions then there is no existence of society. In the article, theories are analysed in order to identify whether they provide an adequate base to test the present system of accounting (Danks, 2015). To understand the inadequacy of theories or established theories exploration of problems which were accompanied with Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11 were described. At present, numerous theories are there, which provides irrelevant logics and not helps in analysing the research problem or to make base for effective decision making. Theories which are related to testing measurement, has been considered in this article. In order to get better results assertions are used in the auditing as they deliv er facts. With the use of assertions a factual statement can be made which provides a base in process of auditing. In order to make the factual statement, expertise used their personal experience and so this condition concedes to use auditing theory or assertions in the field of scientific research (Campo and Lichtman, 2008). Hypothesis testing- A different theoretical framework which is important for positive accounting research is hypothesis testing. Through hypothesis testing, researches can give valid reasons to prove their points or research as this test generates effective result (Clement et al., 2014). Probability data is used in the hypothesis testing in order to test the figures as well as to analyse the situation in restricted time frame. In hypothetical test, more consideration is given to the quantitative date instead of qualitative data. Vague figures can mislead the results for that reason relying on quantitative data is not enough to get better result or solution for the research problem. So it is not wrong to say that it is main issue of applying hypothetical test for the research (Devlieger, Mayer and Rosseel, 2016). Significance and limitations of the article Using literature to examine the theorys limitations and methodology which is used: In order to conclude the usability and reliability of the accounting research, positive theories of accounting has been evaluated and discussed in this article. Accounting is considered as the main branch in academic research which is utilised to implement and preparing the accounting facts. Theories of accounting are limited regarding evaluating and explaining the theoretical prospect of accounting theories and its framework (Primiero, 2014). It is explained earlier, that the accounting positive theory explains the limitations and actions of the accounting research. Positive accounting theory has a good capability to predict and assume the events of the real world and explains them to the transactions of accounting. In comparison with the other theories, it is capable to predict and define and other are not able to mention what needs to be performed (Ennis and Ennis, 2010). This theory is assumed to be a good theory but it has many critics also. Positive accounting theory does not include accounting research quantitative prospective which are related to various perceptions. Positive accounting theories are based on several concepts that need to be explained and understood which are linked with the accounting practices and research which are accepted by the whole world. Concepts applicability is not examined by the positive accounting theory but in this theory examine of accounting perceptions happen. Methodology is used to specify the system that is used to define which method is used in this project. In this positive accounting theory, empirical research design is used. There are various limitations of accounting theories which are defined in the book Half a Defence Of Positive Accounting Research. Positive accounting theory is not having any base for further improvement in the practises of accounting but it is only having the explanation and examination of the used perceptions. Companies in present scenario work toward to ensure that they should apply accounting theories which should provide effective set of support to it. The theory which fails to fulfil the requirements of the company cannot be used, so, it does not seem to be productive. Positive accounting theorys assumptions are indefinite and it does not follow the GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles). It explains all the work which is to be done and all are only interrelated with the self - interest. For the accounting theories which are being applied by the company it is required that all set of generally accepted accounting principles should be included with the help of which an assurance could be made that the theory which is being applied by the organisation is up to the market and will help in the sustainability process of the same with the help of which organisation will be able to move on the path of success (Ge and Lennox, 2009). Further area of improvement of this theory is not possible and it is scientifically approved theory. This theorys applicability has raised many questions. For the companies applying the theories it is being assured that the theory which is being applied should be flexible, theories of rigid nature could not provide proper set of support to the organisation and affects the future progress (Fraser, 2014). Flexible theories ensure that the company could manage to change all the aspects according to the requirements of the market as well as scenarios with the help of which company could manage the situation and ensure to move on the path of success as well as sustainability. Positive accounting theory is not based on the any generally perceptions but on separately accounting perspective. Moreover, there are many variety of accounting concepts but this theory is based on the separately accounting concept. Author in this article has made satisfactory efforts in order to overwhelm from the confines of positive accounting theory. To analyse the positive accounting theory hypothesis test is also done; questions put up by hypothesis in this article supports logics as well as practice of positive accounting theory. Methodologies take account of test of several models and aspects on the basis of reasoning as well as elements of practice undertaken. Conclusions After analysing the article, it has been concluded that the accounting practices which are adopted in the activities of research are not as appropriate as it could be. The quantitative measure used in the research for positive accounting reveals downwards trend. It is also concluded that better decisions cannot be made through analytical models as they lays emphasis on trends which are not developed adequately (Kothari and Skinner, 2010). Measurement techniques should be used in proper way in order to test the theoretical models in effective way. Emphasis shall be laid on improvement of theories or concept`s measurement instead of concentrating on testing of theories or concepts. Another conclusion made through analysis is that hypothesis testing is inadequate to analyse the results as they provide ambiguous ideas for the researchers to make decisions. In order to overcome from the drawbacks which are possessed by these concepts or theory, replication is vital in positive accounting research. Consequences drawn from this article are interconnected with development, design, application as well as structuring of theories and framework for accounting in the field of knowledge. Certain theories are statistically sound which are used for statistical measures but practical applications of these theories are merely assumed. To make better decisions positive accounting theory can play a vital role but it is important to apply the measurement techniques in proper way so that deficient functions can be tackled. References Baker, C. 2011. A genealogical history of positivist and critical accounting research. Accounting History, vol. 16, no 2, pp 207-221. Beise, B., Sherr, M. 2015. Making Human Behavior Theory Real through the Unreal: Fiction in the HBSE Classroom. Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment, pp 1-10. Bouaziz, M., Ambroise, C., Guedj, M. 2011. Accounting for Population Stratification in Practice: A Comparison of the Main Strategies Dedicated to Genome-Wide Association Studies. PLoS One, 6(12), PLoS One, Dec 2011, Vol. 6, no 12. Campo, M., Lichtman, S. 2008. Interpretation of Research in Physical Therapy: Limitations of Null Hypothesis Significance Testing. Journal of Physical Therapy Education, vol. 22, no 1, pp 43-48. Clement, Matthew J., Rodhouse, Thomas J., Ormsbee, Patricia C., Szewczak, Joseph M., Nichols, James D., McKenzie, Ailsa. 2014. Accounting for false?positive acoustic detections of bats using occupancy models. Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 51, no 5, pp 1460-1467. Cooper, G., Humphry, S. 2012. The ontological distinction between units and entities. Synthese, vol. 187, no 2, pp 393-401. Danks, D. 2015. Goal-dependence in (scientific) ontology. Synthese, vol. 192, no 11, pp 3601-3616. Devlieger, Ines, Mayer, Axel, Rosseel, Yves. 2016. Hypothesis Testing Using Factor Score Regression: A Comparison of Four Methods. Educational and Psychological Measurement, vol. 76, no 5, pp 741-770. Ennis, Daniel M., Ennis, John M. 2010. Equivalence hypothesis testing. Food Quality and Preference, vol. 21, no 3, pp 253-256. Fraser, K. 2014. Position paper: Defeating the paradigm wars in accounting: A mixed-methods approach is needed in the education of PhD scholars. International Journal of Multiple Research Approaches, vol. 8, no 1, pp 49-62. Ge, R., Lennox, Clive. 2009. Two Essays on Positive Accounting Research, ProQuest Dissertations and Theses. Kothari, Ramanna, Skinner. 2010. Implications for GAAP from an analysis of positive research in accounting. Journal of Accounting and Economics, vol. 50, no 2, pp 246-286. Lambert, R. 2010. Discussion of "Implications for GAAP from an analysis of positive research in accounting". Journal of Accounting and Economics, vol 50, no 2, pp 287-295. Lambert, R. 2010. Discussion of "Implications for GAAP from an analysis of positive research in accounting". Journal of Accounting and Economics, vol. 50, no 2, pp 287-295. Martin, Lee. 2010. Science and Creativity: The Importance of Ontology for Scientific Understanding. Gifted and Talented International, vol. 25, no 1, pp 69-73. Primiero, G. 2014. On the Ontology of the Computing Process and the Epistemology of the Computed. Philosophy Technology, vol. 27, no 3, pp 485-489.