The Discovery of Phthalates - Karen Li

Science takes a big part in our lives while we corporate with science imperceptibly without noticing. We use science for building our houses, we use science for wearing appropriate clothing, we use science for our electronic devices, and we use science even for the simplest parts in our lives. One of the most considerable problems around the globe is about the environment. As we have being hoping that those issues can be katabatic using science. Recently, two high school girls had discovered a way to make our miserable environment condition better.

North Korean Speech For Freedom

        On the Ted stage, the physical definition of hope was presenting her speech on her road to freedom. From war, to peace. Hyeonseo Lee is one of many north Korean women, who desired freedom, and wanted to move to south Korea to seek shelter. Hyeonseo has been through a hard tough road to earn her freedom, and she absolutely deserved every bit of it. 

The 13th Topic

Whats Right to do? Is there a Moral Side to Murder?

  A Harvard justice course covered "The Moral Side of Murder". This was asking "Is Murder ever moral?" where the professor told the students several scenarios  about using  lives to save lives and asked if the act was moral. The professor himself was an amazing public speaker, he was quick at responding, frequently used gestures and was well prepared for anything that the students said or asked.

The Moral Choice Of Right Or Wrong

In this video made by Harvard, they discuss the moral choices of a human being while other lives were at stake. We are all human beings, and we are all equally important as human beings,  and to kill one person just so you can save 5 other people in my opinion is not morally correct, or morally just.

What’s the right thing to do? - Karen

People often face to make a choice. But the choice is usually the compound of two contradictory consequence, justice and injustice. Except for having to make a choice, is there other way out? Is Not-To-Make-Choice a right thing to do? 

The Moral Side of Murder - Eugene Wong


Since I have always had profound interest, I found this lecture on law very interesting. In many ways, this lesson was as much about philosophy as about law. I really enjoyed learning about different styles of reasoning that explained why some people would consider one action (in this case, turning the trolley car to kill one person instead of two, or saving four moderately urgent patients instead of one in critical condition) “right” over another option.

The 12th Topic