Spread Essays

  • Why Rumors Spread

    1013 Words  | 3 Pages

    What makes a rumor spread so fast and keep spreading? A rumor is information or a story that is passed from person to person but has not been proven to be true (Rumor). There have been many studies on why rumors spread. Rumors can be spread in ways such as person to person, and virtually. The reason why rumors are spread is a broader topic. Researchers believe that a great deal of rumors spread because of anxiety and fear. There are also ways to prevent rumors. Rumors are very powerful if not stopped

  • The Spread of Disease In the New World

    1820 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Spread of Disease In the New World The extraordinary good health of the natives prior to the coming of the Europeans would become a key ingredient in their disastrous undoing. The greatest cause of disease in America was epidemic diseases imported from Europe. Epidemic diseases killed with added virulence in the " virgin soil" populations of the Americas. The great plague that arose in the Old World never emerged on their own among the western hemisphere and did not spread across oceans

  • Spread of Christianity Among People Groups

    1774 Words  | 4 Pages

    Spread of Christianity Among People Groups From the very beginning times of Christianity, its message has identified with and transformed communities of people. Christianity itself grew out of a people group who had an identity that stretches back in time thousands of years. The worship of Yahweh, geographically born in ancient Mesopotamia (modern day Iraq) has spread through history to the farthest islands of the seas. Born into the people of Israel, Jesus gathered a small group of followers

  • Reggae As Social Change:The Spread of Rastafarianism

    4367 Words  | 9 Pages

    Reggae As Social Change:The Spread of Rastafarianism Throughout its existence, Jamaica has experienced numerous revolutions, riots, and various forms of social unrest. From early resistance by escaped slaves to all-out fighting to end slavery altogether, not to mention riots in past years, Jamaica has been in a constant state of resistance. All these efforts to make a change have created a Jamaican religion called Rastafarianism, and with it comes a very powerful means of transporting its message:

  • The Medieval Crusades: Launched to Spread Worship of Dionysus

    538 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Medieval Crusades: Launched to Spread Worship of Dionysus Although it is a popular notion that the crusades of the Eleventh through Thirteenth Century Europe were launched to spread Christianity, it is a seldom realized fact that they were actually launched to spread the worship of the Greek God Dionysus. While many fundamentalist radicals and even some historians who ought to know better will dispute this,it is,nevertheless,true. During the Middle Ages in Europe,there were a series

  • The Spread of Islam and the Slave Trade

    1126 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Spread of Islam and the Slave Trade “Segu is a garden where cunning grows. Segu is built on treachery. Speak of Segu outside Segu, but do not speak of Segu in Segu” (Conde 3). These are the symbolic opening words to the novel Segu by Maryse Conde. The kingdom of Segu in the eighteenth and nineteenth century represents the rise and fall of many kingdoms in the pre-colonial Africa. Therefore, Segu indirectly represents the enduring struggles, triumphs, and defeats of people who are of African

  • The Inevitable Spread of Soviet-backed Communism in Eastern Europe

    1888 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Inevitable Spread of Soviet-backed Communism in Eastern Europe At the end of World War II, the Soviet Union, Great Britain and the United States were principle players involved with reshaping post-war Europe. The region most affected policy changes was Eastern Europe, which includes those states that would eventually fall behind the Iron Curtain. While the camaraderie between the Big Three deteriorated, Soviet-backed communism was spreading across Eastern Europe. The argument during this

  • Why the Textile Workers in the South Spread so Quickly

    3286 Words  | 7 Pages

    Why the Textile Workers in the South Spread so Quickly The textile industry was, at one time, one of the largest industries in the south. Starting in the late 1800’s with small local looms, and spreading to become corporations who controled the south and whose influence stretched internationally. One of the first textile industries came to Gaston County North Carolina, and its huge success led to the opening of mills across the Carolina’s and Virginia. As these industries grew they began to

  • Spread Spectrum

    870 Words  | 2 Pages

    established since 2003. In the US the regulator is Federal Communications Commission and has been established since 1934. These regulators govern what frequency band companies can purchase to provide a wireless mobile service to customers. The term spread spectrum is used in data communications and is a technique in which the transmitted signal is distributed over a wide frequency band, much wider than the minimum bandwidth required to transfer the information. The signal distributing is accomplished

  • Hybrid Spread Spectrum Techniques for Cell Phone

    1831 Words  | 4 Pages

    sequence, spread spectrum multiple access technique, there are certain other hybrid combinations that provide the advantage in the area of cellular mobile communication system. The available wideband spectrum is divided in to a number of subspectras with smaller bandwidth. Frequency Hopped Multiple Access Technique (FHMAT) consists of a direct sequence modulated signal whose center frequency is made to hop periodically in a pseudorandom fashion. In this paper we provide a Hybrid Spread Spectrum Techniques

  • Factors that Affect the Strength of the Electromagnet

    1566 Words  | 4 Pages

    Nails · Voltmeter · Plastic Beakers · Electronic Balance Hypothesis: I expect the strongest electromagnet to have a 'soft' iron core; the highest number of coils (45); the strongest voltage (10V) and current and have the coils evenly spread across the iron rod. The 'soft' iron core means it changes easily between being magnetised and de-magnetised, it is perfect for electromagnets, which need to be turned on and off. From a previous experiment, using an electromagnet, I found out

  • The Impact of Smallpox on the New World

    983 Words  | 2 Pages

    Humans have used the different methods of transportation since this time for a number of reasons (i.e. survival in the case of the hunter-gatherer, to spread religion, or in order to search for precious minerals and spices). What few of these human travelers failed to realize is that often diseases were migrating with them. This essay will look at the spread of the disease smallpox. In the following I hope to reveal the history of smallpox as well as why it devastated the New World. In order to understand

  • And The Band Played On

    820 Words  | 2 Pages

    Played On, discusses the origin of the AIDS virus and how it spontaneously spread across the world. It used the Ebola disease to foreshadow the forth coming of another serious disease. The world was not prepared to handle such a contagious plague. Doctors around the world assumed that the first cases of the HIV virus to be just an abnormality of a certain disease, their carelessness of this matter was the start to the spread of this disease. Throughout this movie, it illustrates different points, such

  • The Spread Of English Spread

    2340 Words  | 5 Pages

    Introduction English is a language that has spread rapidly throughout the world over centuries. This essay will aim to look at the way English has spread while focusing on specific areas in the world where English is now a language. There will be four points that are to be discussed in detail within the essay. The first point focuses on the extent to which language variation contributes to marking language users’ identities. This includes looking closely at variations of English around the world

  • James Baldwin’s Critique of the Social Condition

    1202 Words  | 3 Pages

    James Baldwin’s Critique of the Social Condition James Baldwin was an African American writer who, through his own personal experiences and life, addressed issues such as race, sexuality, and the American identity. “Notes of a Native Son” is one of many essays that Baldwin wrote during his lifetime. Within this essay, Baldwin talks about when his father died and the events that revolved around it. His father’s death occurs in the early 1940s, where oppression and racism were still fairly prevalent

  • Anti-semitism

    1021 Words  | 3 Pages

    primarily on religious beliefs. Islam teaches that Allah, the Muslim god, requires that a good Muslim pray a ritual prayer five times per day, give a token of their income to charity, and if possible a pilgrimage to Mecca, their Holy City (“The Rise and Spread of Islam…”). “Muhammad himself was hostile to the Jews” (Rivkin 25) because he believed Allah to be the one true God and saw the Jewish Doctrine of the Trinity to be polytheistic. The Jews, however, rejected all divine worship except their own. Also

  • Spread Of Christianity

    1361 Words  | 3 Pages

    many other elements become the core of these groups. These groups are what we refer to as culture. Throughout history we have seen that many elements have spread throughout the world due to historic events and thus have influenced other cultures. Geographers know this as cultural diffusion. The constant mixing of global cultures through the spread of religion and language has increased more so with the advancements in communications and technologies. Cultural diffusion is the term used to define the

  • The Spread of Islam

    813 Words  | 2 Pages

    but many different beliefs and practices were added to it, making it extremely popular and aiding in its rapid spread. This new religion spread to many different areas surrounding Arabia, both under Mohammad and after his death. The Muslim Empire grew to encompass Spain and the Eastern Roman Empire as well Persia and Africa. Many different practices and methods were used to spread Islam. The religion itself was appealing to, in addition to the inhabitants of Arabia, other people in the surrounding

  • Spread Of Islam

    1189 Words  | 3 Pages

    even breaks down easily in the environment. People do not often think about how paper got to be so popular and useful, and it is important that they know that the spread of Islamic civilization brought paper to the West. It was actually Muslims who learned how to manufacture paper in large quantities, a technology very important to the spread of ideas in the time of the Golden Age of Islam because paper was important for

  • The Spread Of Islam

    930 Words  | 2 Pages

    Nazia Riaz Mr. Ian Wendt Muslim World December 13, 2013 Final Paper Beginning more than 1400 years ago, Islam has spread from the small trading town of Makkah on the Arabian Peninsula and became a world religion practiced on every continent. Like other world religions. Islam has been spreading ever since its origin. Both through migration of Muslims to new places and by individuals who have accepted Islam as their religion having chosen to convert from other religions. During the first century after