Read Me… If You Can… Throughout my life there has been one thing that I have taken for granted everyday. Even now I am taking it for granted. We all are. This thing is not something you can touch or see.
It is an ability that sixteen percent of people in the world live without. That is an estimated 1 040 883 228 people as of March 14, 2005. Can you guess what this ability that the other eighty four percent of the people take for granted? Literacy. It has been a problem for society since the starting of languages.
Illiteracy, which is defined by the inability to read or write a simple sentence in any language, will continue to haunt the world for many years to come. There are many reasons why there are a billion people in the world not able to read. But I think that the real question is are not the literates taking advantage of the talent. Are they lazy or just don’t care? My most cherished ability is being able to read. I cannot imagine my life not being able to read. So what’s stopping people from reading? Books have been a major way to express ideas, ways of doing thing and beliefs in the modern world.
People have been reading, gaining information, and ideas from books since the Diamond Sutra, which was first published in 868 AD, to the world-renowned book the Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown. Now image that you cannot read these magnificent pieces of work; would you feel left out? Imagine you forgot all the information you ever learned in a book. How much would you know? Imagine how much more you could learn by reading a book once a month? Taking these examples into account do you think that it is fair to leave over a billion people in the world in the dark when it comes to history of countries, inventions and the rest of the information that can be found in books? How would you feel if you were being the one deprived of the world’s accomplishments? All the information in the world is stored in books and other types of literature and the people who do have the privileged of reading don’t even take advantage of this. The literate hold the world’s information, not the illiterate, so do not let this talent go to waste. According to CNN an American broadcasting station only forty seven percent of American adults read literature. That means that half of the population of the United States for America doesn’t even use their ability to explore the wonders of civilization and the wealth of knowledge it holds.
Origins of World War II – Book Review
Origins of World War II - Book Review Essay submitted by scott World War II was much more than battles, statistics, politics, and opinions. The things that contributed to its beginning, what happened during the war, and the effects of the war are still being debated and discussed. Patrick Finney assembles some of the best writings for a number of subjects relating to World War II. First the reader ...
I find it really interesting that there are people in the world that would give anything to be able to read but then there are some of us who can read and don’t take advantage of being literate. I think that if you are able to read but don’t use this ability you are just as unfortunate as the guy beside you that can’t even read this essay. We mite as well have let the illiterate person go to school for you and learn to read. Lets face reality, if you cant read you are considered not as superior as those who can. Well if you don’t read what advantage do you really have over the people who cannot? Have the literate become the dummies of society? What if the tables were turned? Imagine a world that eighty two percent of the people could not write, and could not read.
That means that the sixteen percent of people in the world would have all the power, all the knowledge. Would those sixteen percent suck up as much knowledge as they could? I think so. Imagine the money you can make by telling a story to a group of people or explaining to a class what quantum physics is. I am not saying that the literate should abuse the privilege of being able to read but we should at least use it. We need to educate the illiterate and progress human intelligence. What if some where in Africa there is a potential Einstein but he doesn’t learn to read and therefore is not able to explore the world though books and conduct experiments and teach the rest of us about what he finds.
The Term Paper on Brave New World People Society State
Dystopian Societies in Literature and in Life Ever since man began making tools, he has been in search of a better life. For some it is not just a better life they are after but a perfect life. These people are in search of a utopia. Philosophers and novelist have been teaching classes and writing books on how to reach a perfect society with no grief or turmoil. The philosopher Karl Marx wrote " ...
That would be a huge loss to society; that very person could change the face of the earth. We as a world need the education of the people to improve if we expect to make improvements because at a certain point the advancement of technology will stop and we will have to have the whole world educated in order to progress. I don’t believe that society should read more. I believe that we as a society need to understand how important it is for people to be able to read and share the wealth of knowledge that books have to share with them. Without books we would have nothing.
Even three major religions in the world would cease to exist. We would not know about the past. It would be distorted though years of story telling. We need to come to realize that the world has to be educated before we can make any progress. It is time for the future of the world to step up and help ourselves out for the long run.
It is time to reach out and touch someone’s heart with Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. AS the old saying goes “A chain is only as strong as its weakest link.”.