Fascinating lists!

Showing posts with label monsters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monsters. Show all posts

Monday, August 20, 2018

Five Ideas for Research Reports

Copyright 2018 by Gary L. Pullman

1. Fonts

I use Open office, a free word processor that works as well as the Microsoft Office word processor. Open office provides hundreds of fonts, including a few fancy or exotic ones, such as Ar Decode, Ar Delaney, Blackladder ITC, Chiller, Comic Sans MS, Curlz MT, Edwardian Script ITC, Goudy Stout, Matura MT Script Capitals, Jokerman, Kristen ITC, MS Outlook, Ravie, and Wingdings (Wingdings).

One day, while searching for a topic for a Listverse article, I thought there might be one at my fingertips. Literally, there was one: what is the origin of ten unusual fonts? (Listverse requires a list of 10 related items.) The result was that, with a bit of research, I earned $100 for my article, “Top 10 Origins of Famous Fonts” (http://listverse.com/2017/05/23/top-10-origins-of-famous-fonts/). (See? Research can pay!)

2. U. S. State Boundaries

We've all seen political maps of the United States. We've noticed how bizarre state boundaries are. There seems to be no rhyme or reason as to why the states have the shapes and sizes they do. Texas is HUGE, Rhode Island is tiny. Michigan resembles a mitten; Virginia, a lopsided triangle; Oklahoma, a cooking pot; and Colorado, a giant rectangle.

The boundaries of the states look as though they were determined by a madman or madwoman.

I thought, somebody should write a book about this!

Somebody (Mark Unger) did: How the States Got Their Shapes: https://amzn.to/2nR0fjp

He even turned it into a television show broadcast on the History channel.


3. Mythological Creatures

Centaurs. Cyclopes. Gorgons. Lamia. Mermaids. Minotaurs. Satyrs. How did they come to be? What made someone imagine such combinations as humans and horses, one-eye giants, women with snakes for hair, snake women, fish women, men and bulls, and goat men?

Scientists and historians claim to know—about some of the origins of these fantastic mythological creatures, at least. Centaurs were created by people who'd never seen mounted horsemen; cyclopes were invented to account for a mastodon skull; and mermaids were inspired by manatees. Or so they say. But what about the other fantastic creatures of Greek and Roman, Teutonic, and other mythologies?

4. Maps That Show Monsters

I have also long been intrigued by the monsters that appear on ancient and medieval maps. Why this creature and not another? Why is the wind (personified as a man blowing air) blowing on this area of the world and not another? How did the cartographers, or mapmakers, know the coordinates of this mysterious island or this particular sea monster?

Once again, someone else (Edward Brooke-Hitching) wondered the same thing, did some research, and wrote The Phantom Atlas: The Greatest Myths, Lies and Blunders of Maps: https://amzn.to/2w01zEX

5. Sketchy Dinosaurs

Originally, paleontologists believed that dinosaurs were dim-witted, cold-blooded, slow-moving creatures. A few decades later, these same dinosaur doctors reconsidered. Now, the same dinosaurs were thought to be intelligent, warm-blooded, fast-moving creatures. Oh! And, the new school opinion was that dinosaurs descended from birds; previously, paleontologists had supposed them to have evolved from reptiles.

These weren't just changes of thought; they were completely opposite views. If dinosaur doctors could change their minds completely about such “facts” as these, how sound were their theories, overall? How sketchy were dinosaurs, anyway?

As it turns out, very. One only has to take note of the multitude of qualifications in The Scientific American's Book of Dinosaurs: The Best Minds in Paleontology Create a Portrait of the Prehistoric Era, edited by Gregory S. Paul (https://amzn.to/2nOSMRM), to get an idea just how shaky the whole “scientific” construct of dinosaurs' appearances, behaviors, and, well, reality truly is. As Mark Twain observed, “There is something fascinating about science. One gets such wholesale returns of conjecture out of such a trifling investment of fact.”

What worked for me (and Mark Unger and Edward Brooke-Hitching and “the best minds in paleontology”) can work for you, too, if you're writing a report based on research:
  1. Think about a topic of interest to you that contains a mystery.
  2. Using a variety of reliable sources, investigate the mystery.
  3. Report your findings in a clear, well-organized, grammatically correct, and readable fashion, citing your sources, and providing plenty of substantiating details.


Tuesday, May 13, 2008

A Three-Step Brainstorming Process

copyright 2008 by Gary L. Pullman

Brainstorming is a way to generate a thesis sentence for an essay and the material that you need to support and develop the essay’s topic sentences. There are several ways to brainstorm, but one of the most effective involves these three steps:
  1. List
  2. Group
  3. Use your imagination to create a situation that provides a purpose for your essay to create your thesis

When necessary, step one or step two (or, for that matter, step three) may be repeated.

Let’s try an example to see how this three-step brainstorming process works.

We’ll select a topic about which most high school and college students know quite a bit--horror movies. According to the first step, we should generate a list of such movies. List as many as possible. This step can be accomplished individually or in small groups or, if the teacher or instructor allows, as an entire class exercise.

Here’s a possible list of horror movies, in no particular order, the title of each added as it came to mind (remember that the titles of a long literary work, such as a movie, is underlined or italicized):

  • Alien
  • The Exorcist
  • The Birds
  • Psycho
  • Carrie
  • The Howling
  • Dracula
  • Frankenstein
  • The Mummy’s Curse
  • Poltergeist
  • The Others
  • I Know What You Did Last Summer
  • Descent
  • The Hills Have Eyes
  • Them!
  • The Blob
  • Texas Chainsaw Massacre
  • The Ring
  • The Shining
  • The Thing
  • The Abominable Dr. Phibes
  • Burn, Witch, Burn
  • Needful Things
  • ‘Salem’s Lot
  • Halloween
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street
  • Night of the Living Dead
  • Saw
  • Jaws

Now, let’s repeat step one, listing the monster or the antagonist that appears in each movie:

  • Alien--extraterrestrial
  • The Exorcist--devil
  • The Birds--birds
  • Psycho--mad kille
  • Carrie--telekinetic girl
  • The Howling--werewolves
  • Dracula--vampire
  • Frankenstein--monster assembled from parts of dead bodies
  • The Mummy’s Curse--mummy
  • Poltergeist--poltergeist
  • The Others--ghosts
  • I Know What You Did Last Summer--mad killer
  • Descent--trolls
  • The Hills Have Eyes--mutant cannibals
  • Them!--giant ants
  • The Blob--extraterrestrial
  • Texas Chainsaw Massacre--mad killer
  • The Ring--ghost
  • The Shining--ghosts
  • The Thing--extraterrestrial
  • The Abominable Dr. Phibes--mad killer
  • Burn, Witch, Burn--witch
  • Needful Things--devil
  • ‘Salem’s Lot--vampires
  • Halloween--bogeyman
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street--bogeyman
  • Night of the Living Dead--zombies
  • Saw--mad killer
  • Jaws--shark

After listing as many horror films as you can think of, perform step two, which is to group. Think of a way to group the movies on your list. For example, they could be listed by the type of monster or antagonist (natural, paranormal, or supernatural) that each film has.

At this point, one may ask what is the difference between the paranormal and the supernatural. The answer is that the paranormal is considered an aspect of the natural world (the universe) but that its basis is currently unknown and, therefore, cannot be explained scientifically at present. The supernatural also cannot be explained scientifically, but it is believed to belong to a reality that is above and beyond, outside of, and transcendent to the natural world, or universe. A materialist (one who believes that only matter and energy, which are interchangeable states or substances, exist) will not accept the possibility of supernatural powers, forces, or entities. A dualist (one who believes in both matter and energy and spirit) can, and frequently does, accept the possibility of supernatural powers, forces, and entities. (“There are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy,” the dualist, paraphrasing Hamlet, might tell the materialist, to which the materialist might reply, “There is no ghost in the machine.”) A good place to make clear the distinction between the paranormal and the supernatural would be your introductory paragraph.

With this matter settled, we can now decide which of the horror movie monsters or antagonists belongs to each of these three types, natural (N), paranormal (P), or supernatural (S), but, remember, nature to the scientist, includes everything in the universe, the universe itself included:

  • Alien--extraterrestrial (N)
  • The Exorcist--devil (S)
  • The Birds--birds (N)
  • Psycho--mad killer (N)
  • Carrie--telekinetic girl (P)
  • The Howling--werewolves (S)
  • Dracula--vampire (S)
  • Frankenstein--monster assembled from parts of dead bodies (N)
  • The Mummy’s Curse--mummy (S)
  • Poltergeist--poltergeist (P)
  • The Others--ghosts (P)
  • I Know What You Did Last Summer--mad killer (N)
  • Descent--trolls (N)
  • The Hills Have Eyes--mutant cannibals (N)
  • Them!--giant ants (N)
  • The Blob--extraterrestrial (N)
  • Texas Chainsaw Massacre--mad killer (N)
  • The Ring--ghost (P)
  • The Shining--ghosts (P)
  • The Thing--extraterrestrial (N)
  • The Abominable Dr. Phibes--mad killer (N)
  • Burn, Witch, Burn--witch (S)
  • Needful Things--devil (S)
  • ‘Salem’s Lot--vampires (S)
  • Halloween--bogeyman (S)
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street--spirit (P)
  • Night of the Living Dead--zombies (S)
  • Saw--mad killer (N)
  • Jaws--shark (N)

Now, during step three, we imagine a situation that would give us a reason, or purpose, for writing about such a topic. Let’s assume that cousin Melba, who lives abroad and who has heard of, but never seen, a horror movie is coming to the United States to visit. Upon her arrival, you ask her what she would like to do, and she says, “See the scariest horror movie ever made!” Consider your three types of horror monsters or villains: natural, paranormal, and supernatural. Which is likely to be the most frightening of all? (I have used this exercise in several composition classes, and the answers tend to vary; at least one class has picked each type at one time or another. They vote, and the majority wins. After the issue has been thus decided, I ask for three reasons as to why the majority considers the type of monster or antagonist they chose as most frightening is, in their view, the scariest.)

Let’s say that you decide that the natural horror movie villain is the most frightening. Now, give three reasons as to why you think this is true:

  • It is believable.
  • It is realistic.
  • It could be encountered in the everyday world.

Viola! You now have a thesis for an evaluation essay, in which, contrasting three types of horror movie monster or villain, you will argue that the natural antagonist is more frightening than the paranormal or supernatural alternatives. (Important! Remember that your thesis must have a purpose; it can't be simply a list of related points; the purpose of this thesis is to suggest why one type of horror movie villain is more frighetning than others, and your essay will use reasons and examples to make this claim clear and persuasive to your reader.) Your thesis (with the three points, each in a different color and underlined) might read:

Although paranormal and supernatural horror movie monsters are frightening, the natural villain is more terrifying still, because it is realistic, it is believable, and it could be encountered in everyday life.

But, as they say in infomercials, That’s not all!

You also have quite a list of examples of horror films and their respective monsters or antagonists that you can use, once you expand upon them, as material to support and develop your essay’s thesis and topic sentences.

Remember the three steps:

  1. List
  2. Group
  3. Use your imagination to create a situation that provides a purpose for your essay to create your thesis

These steps can be used to generate a thesis for any type of essay, whether the essay is:

  • Analysis
  • Argumentation
  • Causal analysis (cause-effect)
  • Classification (usually used with division)\
  • Comparison (usually used with contrast)
  • Contrast (usually used with comparison)
  • Definition
  • Description
  • Division (usually used with classification)
  • Evaluation
  • Exemplification, or illustration'
  • Narration
  • Persuasion
  • Process analysis (“how to”)