In the video entitled the “Science of Storytelling”, Will Storr asserts that: Moral outrage motivates us to act – you are motivated to step in and rescue someone.Stories usually have heroes and villains. Heroes in a story behave selflessly whereas villains in a story behave selfishly.It is generally accepted that what humans think of selflessness as morally good and selfishness as morally bad.When we struggle successfully against great odds we thrive physically and psychologically.The end of the story is the answer to a simple question. How do I control the world when unexpected change happens? When chaos strikes what do I have to do and who do I have to be in order to control it?Stories are a form of play that teaches us how to manage and control the world in which there is terrifying change.Group of answer choicesAll answers are correct.Answers B, C and D are correct.Answers A, B, D, E and F are correct.Answers A, D, E and F are correct.
Question
In the video entitled the “Science of Storytelling”, Will Storr asserts that: Moral outrage motivates us to act – you are motivated to step in and rescue someone.Stories usually have heroes and villains. Heroes in a story behave selflessly whereas villains in a story behave selfishly.It is generally accepted that what humans think of selflessness as morally good and selfishness as morally bad.When we struggle successfully against great odds we thrive physically and psychologically.The end of the story is the answer to a simple question. How do I control the world when unexpected change happens? When chaos strikes what do I have to do and who do I have to be in order to control it?Stories are a form of play that teaches us how to manage and control the world in which there is terrifying change.Group of answer choicesAll answers are correct.Answers B, C and D are correct.Answers A, B, D, E and F are correct.Answers A, D, E and F are correct.
Solution
All answers are correct.
Similar Questions
Define and elaborate GREED and CHAOS.Discuss how greed affect chaos.Resolve the conflict between GREED and CHAOS by acting as a citizen of peace. Promote peace and explain its' importance in solving the problem that exist between greed and chaos.
2. How do the main characters respond to the disaster emotionally, physically, and psychologically?
How do I conclude this podcast script (a short one will do): Who decides where you are born and where you go? Who decides whom you love and what you do? Who decides whether you tell the truth or lie? Who decides when it’s time for you to die? A line from Shakespeare’s Julius Ceasar questions whether our lives should be dictated by fate or free will. I once had that same question too. But after reading “Shrimps in Space” in Desmond Sim’s student plays. I realised that we have the power to take things into our own hands and create wonders in our lives. The protagonist in the play, Huat Bee fails spectacularly at everything. First, he was given a nickname, Hay Bee, which means “Dried Shrimp”. Later, he discovers that he was extremely scrawny for his age and has a 26 pinch waist even after drinking “protein-enriched milk formula three times a week.” When playing rugby, he becomes a laughable victim of life – he is no match for the bigger and better boys. Alas, he gives up at everything. He is resigned to his fate, which, to him “determined everything”. Are you like Hay Bee, internalising stereotypes the world imposes on us – we’re not intelligent, fast, muscular as others? Do you feel like you’re being prejudiced by life? Perhaps so but remember that it doesn't need to be that way. Huat Bee meets a fellow rugby player, Norman, and discovers that he played rugby not to be admired, but because he, like everyone else, wanted the 2 bonus points when applying for Junior College! Huat Bee discovers this: Everyone has a different path to tread, different strengths to hone. He finally took his life by the horns and embraced free will. The impact of his anagnorisis is so powerful that it drove him to enrol into 3 CCAs, and even became the president of all three. Later in university, everyone called in Huat Bee, not Hay Bee. At that instance, he realises how much he resented that name. After all, names are symbolic and represent us. To Huat Bee, Hay Bee represented the flawed version of himself. So, with the change in name brings out a change in character – Huat Bee symbolically shrugs of the name and shackles associated with it. He finally embraced free will, after years of fate.
Why do you think the story is set in a future?
In what ways do any of the characters change from the beginning of the story to the end? What is the author saying about the human condition based on the development of these characters?
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