Content is king, and back links are the heavy lifters, but I am hedging my bets that 2012 will be the year that the Semantic Web starts to take over and our online
authority on particular topics starts to weigh in the most.
The Download (comprising 4 files, within one zip file) includes: - A PPT Containing a Full Lesson - A complete lesson plan covering: objectives, key - words, differentiation, and lesson timeline - Double - sided A4 worksheet - A3 Silent Debate group worksheets - A Homework Task The
topic of the lesson focusses
on the following part of the specification: Human Concerns [Duties / Virtues / Yamas] • Hindu understanding of the concepts of free will, suffering and virtue, including their relationship to karma and samsara • The meaning and importance of Hindu virtues / moral duties (yamas), including harmlessness / non-violence (Ahimsa), compassion (daya), selfcontrol / restraint (dama) and giving (dana) • The relationship between virtues and
particular elements of dharma • Common and divergent emphases placed
on human concerns by different Hindu groups, including which virtues are identified as of core importance • Different interpretations and emphases given to sources of wisdom and
authority by different Hindu groups Sources: Mahabharata V 39 Bhagavad Gita XVI, 1 — 3 Bhagavad Gita VIII 8 — 12 This is part of a series of lessons, if you like it: save countless hours by downloading the complete course!
Pursuant to the legal
authorities which I have cited supra, and with
particular reference to the albeit limited Irish jurisprudence
on the
topic, I am satisfied that, provided the process has sufficient transparency, Technology Assisted Review using predictive coding discharges a party's discovery obligations under Order 31, rule 12.