Include cover and reference pages to this paper. Use multiple sources and references (minimum of 2) to enhance the quality of your paper. Maximum of 4 pages excluding cover and reference pages.
1. State the name of the plaintiff(s)
Defendant(s),
Volume Number,
Page Number.
Name of the Reporter,
Court that decided the case
2. Describe the topic(s) as discussed in the chapters of your textbook that this case touches
3. Describe the Facts of the case
4. What is/are the plaintiff(s) claiming?
5. What is/are the Defendant’s side of the story?
6. How was this case viewed in the media?
7. What was public opinion about this case?
8. What evidence did the plaintiff(s) put forth in an attempt to prove its case?
9. What evidence did the defendant(s) put forth in an attempt to defend itself?
10. When and what was the court’s deposition of the case?
11. What is your take on the court’s decision?
12. Give your overall summary
duction that have been conducted in the natural sciences that are mainly the product of an individual. Albert Einstein was a German theoretical physicist who majorly contributed to modern day physics through his theory of relativity and other findings. In 1905, Einstein was working at the patent office doing creative work. He began to produce at least four revolutionary articles in 1905 by himself. The first essay Einstein published was an application of the quantum theory, a conjecture founded by physicist Max Planck. This theory was related to light to explain the photoelectric effect to expand on the ideas of Planck. The second article was about atoms and electrons analyzing motion based on the findings of Robert Brown. The other two articles were based on two principal theories of physics by Isaac Newton. Even though the articles were written and analyzed by Einstein alone, each paper was based on the findings of another demonstrating collaboration. This shows that the production of knowledge can be individual but must be collaborative to some extent. Similarly, there are studies of knowledge production being an individual task in the human sciences. Psychologist Roger Sperry performed multiple experiments animals and humans in order to find the function of each hemisphere of the brain in regards to behavior. In the 1950s and 1960s, he studies and severed the corpus callosum to discover split brain, the idea that the hemispheres of the brain function independently. In the late 1900s, he performed more split brain research at the California Institute of Technology. Most of his research revolved around his dissections of the corpus callosum. Since he was conducting these studies by himself, many years later he found that the left hemisphere relates to understanding language while the right hemisphere relates to recognition and not articulation. Because his research was revolutionary and the product of an individual, Sperry received the Nobel Prize for his work. In order to further expand on his discoveries, other psychologists have expanded on Sperry’s work to evaluate the right and left hemispheres as seen in the Embryo Project at Arizona State University. Through shared knowledge, this discovery along with findings were solidified. Since other psychologists have utilized the split brain research, there has been some collabor