In the beginning of The Odyssey, Zeus, the king of the gods, complains that humans tend to blame the gods for the bad things that happen to them, even though these bad things are usually the consequences of human choices, not divine intervention. He mentions that the gods warned Aegisthus not to get involved with Agamemnon’s wife, and Aegisthus’s sorrowful death was his own fault, not the gods (Odyssey 1.37-52). In other passages, however, humans seem to argue that the gods, and Zeus in particular, are responsible for human sorrows (1.400-403; 8.647-650). Given the events of the readings so far, which perspective is more correct? Who is to blame for human suffering, the immortal gods or the mortal humans?
CASE 2.2 Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association, 564 U.S. 786…
CASE 2.2 Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association, 564 U.S. 786 (2011) . What to understand about this case and How Justices came with the rationale? who are parties? What are the facts ? what are the procedures? and what are the issues?