iWriteGigs

Fresh Grad Lands Job as Real Estate Agent With Help from Professional Writers

People go to websites to get the information they desperately need.  They could be looking for an answer to a nagging question.  They might be looking for help in completing an important task.  For recent graduates, they might be looking for ways on how to prepare a comprehensive resume that can capture the attention of the hiring manager

Manush is a recent graduate from a prestigious university in California who is looking for a job opportunity as a real estate agent.  While he already has samples provided by his friends, he still feels something lacking in his resume.  Specifically, the he believes that his professional objective statement lacks focus and clarity. 

Thus, he sought our assistance in improving editing and proofreading his resume. 

In revising his resume, iwritegigs highlighted his soft skills such as his communication skills, ability to negotiate, patience and tactfulness.  In the professional experience part, our team added some skills that are aligned with the position he is applying for.

When he was chosen for the real estate agent position, he sent us this thank you note:

“Kudos to the team for a job well done.  I am sincerely appreciative of the time and effort you gave on my resume.  You did not only help me land the job I had always been dreaming of but you also made me realize how important adding those specific keywords to my resume!  Cheers!

Manush’s story shows the importance of using powerful keywords to his resume in landing the job he wanted.

Exam 1

Navigation   » List of Schools  »  California State University, Northridge  »  Religion  »  Religious Studies (RS1) – Contemporary Ethical Issues  »  Spring 2020  »  Exam 1

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Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:

Question #21
A  Plato’s Republic
B  Aristotle’s “Nicomachean Ethics”
C  Kant’s “Grounds for Metaphysics of Morals” 
D  Plato’s “Euthyphro” 
Question #22
A  Humans are capable of being good, but because of their weakness choose to be bad
B  Humans are originally pure, but Satan makes them sinful by tempting them 
C  Humans have divine nature and do not usually sin, but they make mistakes because of their lack of faith 
D  Humans nature is fallen and sinful from the beginning and they are unable to be good 
Question #24
A  There is no one object, but numerous, because each person sees his/her own version of the object
B  Each object can have three versions: the one depicted by painters, art, imitators, the second – the actual physical, and the third, which is the only original, true idea of the object
C  Objects have three versions: The physical, which is the real, the imitation through art, which is the shadow and the imitation of the imitation, which is the third
D  Objects are perceived in three ways: how people perceive them relatively, how people see them emotionally and how people interpret them subjectively 
Question #25
A  The garden of Eden 
B  Satan refused to bow down to newly created humans  
C  Satan wanted to become God 
D  Satan sinned and was cast out  
Question #26
A  Asceticism 
B  Hedonism 
C  Bakhti Yoga 
D  Moksha 
Question #27
A  One’s loyalty to duty 
B  Realization that all art is fake 
C  Realization that moral actions will be rewarded in a higher reality 
D  Usefulness and talents 
Question #28
A  All pairs are correct 
B  Utilitarianism/Maximizing happiness for the majority  
C  Islam/Original Sin
D  Cultural Relativism/Universal, Objective Morality 
Question #29
A  Yoga 
B  Nirvana 
C  Kama
D  Karma 
Question #30
A  Cheating is bad, but only in special cases you may, if it is necessary to achieve more important results.
B  You shouldn’t cheat on your exams, because it will produce bad education and will increase unhappiness for the majority
C  You shouldn’t cheat on your exams, because if cheating on exams was the moral norm, there would be no exams, so it doesn’t make sense
D  You shouldn’t cheat on your exams, because it is against the will of God
Question #31
A  Good Will 
B  The 10 commandments 
C  Useful Consequences of actions
D  Cultural Norms
Question #32
A  Bentham believes utilitarianism must maximize pleasure and happiness, but Mill believes in supernaturalism and intuitionism  
B  There is no difference, they both believe in the same principle of pleasure and happiness as the final goal
C  Bentham believes pleasure is pleasure, but Mill thinks higher, dignified and quality pleasure is the final goal
D  Mill thinks Happiness and Pleasure are not the final goal of human beings, but Bentham does 
Question #33
A   Identical in all religions 
B  By necessity, highly metaphoric and symbolic  
C  Unnecessary and superstitious 
D  Urban and political 
Question #34
A  Descriptivism 
B  Realism 
C  Golden Rule 
D  Pluralism 
Question #35
A  Things are good if they produce more pleasure  
B  Things are good and bad in themselves and consequences do not matter 
C  An action is moral if it uses human beings as means to an end
D   Kant is skeptical about morality and doesn’t believe there is objective morality 
Question #36
A  Moral actions are driven by inner motivation originated from consciousness 
B  Morality is different for different people and it all depends on their culture and upbringing 
C  Materialists, because it implies a belief that moral actions are simply emotional phenomenon and are not real or valid 
D  Religious people, because it implies a belief in the emotional validity of the human soul 
Question #37
A  One should always chose the lesser of two evils 
B  Moral statements that cannot be proven empirically, based on sensory data, are simply feelings and are meaningless  
C  All spiritual things are logical and therefore moral 
D  Before taking action, one should carefully weigh “for” and “against” arguments 
Question #38
A  Human soul reincarnates in many bodies based on its karmic debt 
B  Humans have a soul and a spirit and both are immaterial 
C  Humans possess innate ability to foresee upcoming events 
D  Moral choices can only be made based on inner conviction and knowledge of right and wrong. 
Question #40
A  Anselm and Augustine 
B  Bentham and Mill
C  Rumi and Lewis 
D  Kant and Ross