"Proximate and ultimate causation" Essays and Research Papers

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    Torte Law

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    Protection and the Criminal Law: Law‚ Theory‚ and Policy in the UK Cases. (2001). Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law‚ 23(3)‚ 329-339. Forman‚ F.N. (2002). Constitutional Change in the United Kingdom Hart‚ H.L.A.‚ and Honore‚ Tony (1959). Causation in the Law Hervey‚ Tom (1981). Winner Takes All. The Modern Law Review‚ 44(5)‚ 575-580 Markesinis‚ B.S.‚ and Deakin‚ S.F. (1999). Tort Law. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Romohr‚ Phillip W. (2006). A Right/duty Perspective on the Legal and Philosophical

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    Dave stabs Edward in the leg. In terms of causation‚ we must prove that Dave is the cause of Edwards’s death. In terms of factual causation (which has to be used alongside legal causation)‚ but for Dave stabbing Edward in the leg‚ would Edward have died? No he would not‚ therefore Dave is the factual cause of Edwards’s death‚ as per “R v Pagett” where D was the cause‚ however it is not like “R v White” where D was not the cause. In terms of legal causation‚ we must prove that Dave is the significant

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    the result of the act or omission of the defendant. The Act itself may not be criminal‚ but the result of the act may be. For instance it is not a crime to throw a stone‚ but if it hits a person or smashes a window it could amount to a crime. Causation must be established in all result crimes. Examples of result crimes:   Assault Battery ABH Wounding and GBH Murder & Manslaughter Criminal damage State of affairs For state of affairs crimes the Actus Reus consists of ’being’ rather than

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    Chemical Growth

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    physic-chemical properties of moringa seed flour and oil. The moringa seed were divided into two portions. The first portion was milled into flout while the second portion was defatted using soxlet extraction method. The moringa cake was milled into flour. Proximate‚ mineral‚ anti-nutritional compositions were carried out on the flour samples while the physico-chemical properties of the oil were evaluated. The moisture content of the moringa seed cake was slightly higher than that of raw moringa flour. It

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    Al Capone: A Criminal Mind

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    Alphonse Capone‚ born 1899 in Brooklyn New York‚ is one of the most famous criminals of all time. Capone was known as the eventual leader of the feared Colosimo mob in the 1925s with such notorious criminals as Johnny Torrio and Lucky Luciano (Federal Bureau of Investigation‚ 2008). Also known in his affiliation with the historic St. Valentine’s Day Massacre on February14‚ 1929 in which seven members of the Bugs Moran mob was plastered with machine gun bullets against a garage as the offenders posed

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    Organismal Biology Study Guide for Test # 4 (4 MAY 2005 – Wed) Chapter 34 – Section F – Primates and the Evolution of Homo sapiens Opposable thumb – in primates; but fully opposable only in anthropoid primates Prosimians – example – lemurs Anthropoidea (anthropoids) – includes moneys‚ apes‚ humans Brachiating – swinging through the trees by the arms Overlapping fields of vision (3-D) – advantage for brachiating Old World vs New World monkeys – differences and similarities Know 4 genera

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    In Chisholm`s: Human Freedom and the Self‚ he discusses the objection of `immanent causation` which he describes as an agent causing an event. In other words‚ an event does nothing to cause an additional event. Instead‚ Chisholm argues that the agent can be a human being that causes these events. Specifically speaking‚ immanent causation can be something that cannot be catalysed by an event‚ such as the physiological activities of our brains. Physiologically speaking‚ the communications of neurons

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    HLTEN401A WORK IN THE NURSING PROFESSION. ASSESSMENT AND SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS. Q1. In the earliest forms of nursing‚ men were the carers of the sick and dying. The hospitals were founded by the military‚ and little equipment existed to enable the wounded to recover. Throughout the 16th to early 19th Centuries‚ nursing was carried out by both men and women‚ in overcrowded wards‚ training for nurses was non-existent‚ and many nurses were of bad character. By the middle of the 19th Century

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    Week 2 Knowledge Check Study Guide Concepts Mastery Questions Intentional torts 100% 1 2 3 Negligence 100% 4 5 6 67% 7 8 9 100% 10 Product liability and strict liability Defenses to product liability Score: 11 / 12 11 12 Concept: Intentional torts Mastery 100% Questions 1. Identify the true statement about intentional torts. 1 2 3 A. A person can be sued for assault even if there was no actual physical contact. B. A person can be sued for threatening future harm. C

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    Causation or Correlation Checkpoint Correlation is an occurrence or action that can cause or correlates to another action. An example would be smoking. When a person smokes the chemicals inhaled could cause alcoholism. We could correlate that a smoker will abuse alcohol. This cannot be definitely proved but there is a connection between the two. In this scenario‚ one action affects the other. Causation is the one action actually causes the other action. There is a direct connection between

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