Recent orders

Case in Point

Name:

Course:

Professor:

Date:

Case in Point

The world slumped into an economic recession between the year 2008 and 2009, and this affected many companies all over the world. Samsung is one of the companies affected by the financial crisis at the time, and this is reflected in its share price in the year 2009. During an economic depression, spending drastically reduces as people earn less money and thus have less disposable income. They choose to spend less, affecting sales of a company like Samsung and therefore making share prices decline. Things took a turn for the better between 2010 and 2014 as share prices for Samsung rose significantly. As the world recovered from the financial depression of the previous years, there was a growth in the economy. More people got jobs, business improved, salaries rose, and people had more money to spend. In addition to this, these years were marked by an increase in products from Samsung, such as mobile phones and other electronics. These occurrences led to the rapid rise in the share prices of the company.

Market risk affected the share prices of Shell Oil as well as McDonald’s, although to a lesser extent compared to Samsung. The demand for food and gasoline remains fairly steady during times of both economic growth and slump. While people can choose not to buy electronics, they cannot help but purchase food and fuel their cars every day. McDonald’s provides people with affordable meals; hence, customer demand falls only slightly during an economic depression. This aspect of steady customer demands works both ways; share prices do not decrease significantly during a financial crisis, but neither do they rise dramatically during an economic boom. To conclude, higher risk leads to a higher return in the case of Samsung, and the opposite is true in the case of McDonalds and Shell Oil.

Motivation Letter

Motivation Letter

The Dunia Beam Scholarship serves as a vital opportunity for me to meet one of my youngest and long lasting dreams. When I was young, I saw people from my family moving to overseas to advance their studies, which turned out to be one of my life’s dreams. I have always had an urge to seek credible ways of moving to a country where I would advance my studies. My main focus is to gain professional knowledge to apply in the future. As such, I find The Dunia Beam Scholarship as the most efficient opportunity for me to realize my dream by undertaking my studies abroad.

In addition to my ambition and dreams to join a recognized university abroad, I also find the need to undertake the scholarship based on my performance in school. I am an industrious individual who is always ready to deliver quality work and within the stipulated time. Hence, I am ready to utilize this opportunity and advance my knowledge in marketing as a course. I have a deep passion for the subject and believe that this is the area where I want to forge a career in, once I complete my studies successfully. I believe that passion is an essential fuelling factor that plays a major role in helping me decide the course to undertake and career to follow. Therefore, I have already decided to undertake a marketing course once I am given the opportunity through The Dunia Beam Scholarship. It is clear that my priorities are well outlined, and I am hopeful that this proves that I am ready to undertake the scholarship.

Interacting with new people is something I enjoy doing as they expose me to new cultures, different ways of doing things and I make friends. I have great communication skills that I put to use when meeting people and they make it easy for me to adapt to a new life easily. This proves that I will fit with new people upon leaving my native country and joining a new community abroad. Back at the university in my home country, I engage in a lot of activities that improve my communication skills, for example, empowerment clubs, managing and network marketing. These activities provide me with the opportunity to interact with many different people, which helps me to comprehend their interests, cultures, and interacting skills among other things. Hence, I have learnt the importance of listening and understanding other people, which makes it easy to be less judgmental in life. Moreover, it is necessary to fathom a people’s way of life and adapt to it because of the importance that lies in respecting other people’s culture.

I possess various strengths that would make me stand out as a unique student and a potential candidate for The Dunia Beam Scholarship. Firstly and as aforementioned, I am a hardworking person who works with an aim of completing the given work within the stipulated time. Secondly, I am a dedicated individual who is not only disciplined, but also focused on school work. I attribute these personal characteristics to my staunch guardians from home and school as I grew up. They instilled discipline in me that helps me focus on my tasks without wavering from the main work; sequentially, I deliver my work on time and with the expected standards.

My interest in studying abroad is limited to marketing, which is a major I am ready to pursue both in my studies and career. Europe is a fascinating region with many marketing elements that I look forward to studying and using in my life. Thus, my interest falls in attaining essential knowledge linked to marketing, but more so from Europe. Hence, my plan is to study the marketing course in Europe, and engage in campaigns that would help me comprehend the knowledge gained through application. As such, this proves my dedication I have towards studying abroad and my willingness to advance my knowledge and skills in the discipline I will undertake.

I plan on utilizing the knowledge and skills acquired by applying them through working in the community I come from or in the one I will reside in during my studies. Thus, I will use my knowledge and skills to improve the way marketing is currently done in my native country, which will assist me in improving my country’s economic performance. It is my hope that I will deliver the learnt knowledge and skills to assist the lives of the people around me. Being generous is also a unique skill that I possess and one that encourages me to assist others.

I really look forward to an international exposure in my life, and I believe that The Dunia Beam Scholarship platform will serve me right and assist me to realize my dream. The exposure will not only assist me by providing additional knowledge and skills to advance my career, but will also give me the correct tools to assist people around. As such, I believe I am a potential candidate and hope to attain this life changing opportunity.

Monthesim, one of the best known theistic systems

MonthesimSo many similarities flow through man’s interpretation of the unknown and the spiritual and it seems that all cultures and times have had the need to have something in their lives other then the material world that we can see, smell, taste and touch. Many today follow the belief in the One God. This seems to be driven by the notion that a supreme god is needed for religion which is driven by the hope for some form of salvation. The God of religion is the unspeakably great Lord on whom man depends, in whom he recognizes the source of his happiness and perfection; He is the righteous Judge, rewarding good and punishing evil; the loving and merciful Father, whose ear is ever open to the prayers of his needy and penitent children. Such a conception of God can be readily grasped by simple, non philosophic minds, by children, by the uneducated peasant, by the converted savage. Even with all their religious crudities and superstitions, such low-grade savages as the Pygmies of the Northern Congo, the Australians, and the natives of the Andaman Islands entertain very noble conceptions of the Supreme Deity. Primitive man was capable of monotheistic belief, even without the aid of Divine revelation, contrary to some religious beliefs. Among the more educated there was support for the belief that many deities were in existence at some level lower than the one supreme deity. Some were even capable of worshiping one god while recognizing the existence of other deities.

Along with polytheism, monothiesm is one of the best known theistic systems. Monotheism is founded upon the idea that there is only one God, typically regarded as the creator of all reality. This god is believed to be totally self-sufficient and without any dependency upon any other being. Other alleged gods might be claimed to be merely aspects of the supreme god – this argument is more commonly found when the transition to monotheism is recent and the older gods need to be explained away. More often, other alleged gods are simply denied any reality at all, or perhaps claimed to be demons tempting people away from the True Faith. This exclusivity has resulted in less religious tolerance and freedom in traditionally monotheistic cultures. The origin of monotheism is unclear.

The first recorded monotheistic system arose in Egypt during the rule of Akhenaton, but it did not long survive his death. Some suggest that Moses, if he existed, brought monotheism to the ancient Hebrews, but it is possible that he was still henotheistic or monolatrous. The earliest Egyptian civilization believed in a single supreme god, who had no name but was described as the source of light the creator of all. He brought fourth rules or natural laws and in their diagrammatic literature these were personified in what we see as the gods and goddesses. Briefly around 1350 BC flourished the worship at Armana in Egypt of Aten/Aton as the one and only manifestation of god, in the near east Zoroaster saw the revelation of one supreme being in the eternal flame around 600 BC and some hundred year later in the Middle East appeared the historical writings from the descendants of Abraham, and out of whose customs grew Judaism, Christianity and Islam.

The form of monotheism which is traditionally most common in the West and which is too often confused with theism in general is the belief in a personal god which emphasizes that this god is a conscious mind that is immanent in nature, humanity and the values which it has created. This god is both independent of and distinct from the created universe and also presently active in the created universe. Because this form of monotheism dominates so strongly in the West, it is not uncommon to find people who simply give it the label “theism,” ignoring all the other forms as being types of theism.

When Abraham was held back from sacrificing Isaac by God around 2000 BC, his God which became the God of the Israelites was seen as but one of many. From the days of Abraham to the days of Moses and beyond, a lot of local gods still existed. When we talk about Akhenaton having but one god, to many He too was but one of many. Even Allah was originally one of many a local god. The God of Abraham and Israel was their God, their chief god, who proved himself over and over to be greater than the gods of other lands and peoples. Even the first of the Ten commandments recognizes ‘other gods’. However the other gods were but the local interpretation of god under a local name.

But what is this “god” thing that is the object of theism? A god is being, usually thought of as a person or having personal qualities, who plays a role in mythology and religion. This object of belief typically possesses supernatural or extraordinary powers far in excess of those that can be attributed to normal, mortal humans. The development of the idea of a “god” can be clearly observed in the development of religion in the Indian subcontinent. Originally, the Indian “gods” were exemplary , strong, and victorious rulers who managed to accomplish a great deal more than their contemporaries. Later they were elevated to godhood and worshiped as supernatural deities. Similar processes can be seen even in the later periods of the Roman Empire, when emperors were declared gods after their death as a matter of routine (although it was not routine that coherent religions were maintained around them for very long). Indeed, the elevation of powerful warriors or kings to the status of godhood may have been one of the earliest ways belief in gods was developed. Another aspect in the development of theism would have been the observation of powerful forces of nature. They all appear to be beyond the influence of humans, but they would also have appeared to be animate, just like humans and animals. Thus would have developed the belief that unseen, powerful spirits are behind the events in life: animism. Parallel with the belief in unseen spirits is the desire to influence those spirits – much the way powerful humans are influenced. Early religion therefore developed means by which humans make offerings to the spirits the same as offerings were made to tribal leaders. They followed whatever rules and orders the spirits might be thought to issue the same as orders from tribal leaders were followed From this sprung the tendency towards organized religion. Monotheism was a gradual process and it was not until around 500 BC that the idea that the God of Israel was the one and only God and always was. Christianity, at first a Jewish sect, confused the issue by developing the idea of a Trinity which took 400 years to define, and even then as a mystery. This Trinity seems to have roots in the three names of the Egyptian God and their fondness for triads. Allah was but the chief amongst a group of Arab gods until they recognized that he was the same God as the God of the Israelites and of the Christians. Just as the Jews had eventually got rid of all other gods so did the Moslems. Perhaps it was a lack of understanding as still exists. One region’s understanding may not be different to another’s but they all struggled to understand the indefinable unknown and eternal with greater or lesser success. As philosophy is always subject to the frailties of man it can often go astray. Some claim divine revelation but it just may be that it is logical. The truth of creation or the law of nature must eventually reveal itself simply because it is the truth. The great question posed by Pontius Pilot ‘What is truth’ is one of the eternal quandaries and at the beginning of all in our earliest civilization lies the guidance of truth from which all else flows.

Bibliography:

Bibliography

1.Sheed, Frank .J. Theology and Sanity ,Oxford/New York; Oxford University Press. 2000

2.Miller. Charles .d. The origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel’s Polytheistic background and the Ugaritic texts, Oxford/New York. Oxford University Press. 2001