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This 6 page paper discusses what it means to be free and happy; it also considers the contributions of homosexuals to society, and the work of Amnesty International. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KV32_HV679267.rtf
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societal issues: the work of Amnesty International and the contributions gays have made to society. Discussion We begin with an almost impossible task: trying to define freedom and happiness. Here
the book The Art of Being Human is a great help, because it encourages readers to become aware of, and appreciate, the arts. In an age where technology seems to
have become a god, people are questioning whether there is a need for the arts. Schools cut their art and music programs and buy new computer equipment; cell phones, I-Pods,
I-Pads and every technological device known to man sells like hotcakes; and people "connect" through screens and text messages rather than in person. More than one person has expressed dismay
about the increasing isolation among members of society, when the element of human contact is removed from daily life. The chapter in The Art of Being Human entitled The humanities:
still vital reminds us that behind all this razzle-dazzle of technology are the human minds who created it; computers, robots, and all the other stuff still arent sentient, nor are
human beings obsolete (The humanities: still vital, 2009). The study of the humanities, which the book espouses, is actually the study of humanism, which is the root of the word
(The humanities: still vital, 2009). And humanism as we know it today grew out of the Renaissance, an extraordinary flowering of human art, science and political thought (The humanities: still
vital, 2009). The Renaissance swept through Europe and in its wake came a number of disciplines that we still study today, art, dance, music and theater among them (The humanities:
still vital, 2009). The point is that what makes us human, and what in turn contributes most to our happiness, is not being tied to a computer or walking around
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