full transcript

From the Ted Talk by Paul Bloom: Can prejudice ever be a good thing?


Unscramble the Blue Letters


And this last part is what is often described as the principle of impartiality. And this principle of ipitalimtray manifests itself in all of the world's religions, in all of the different versions of the golden rule, and in all of the world's moral philosophies, which defifr in many ways but share the presupposition that we should judge morality from sort of an impartial pinot of view.

The best articulation of this view is actually, for me, it's not from a theologian or from a philosopher, but from Humphrey Bogart at the end of "Casablanca." So, spoiler alert, he's telling his lover that they have to separate for the more general good, and he says to her, and I won't do the accent, but he says to her, "It doesn't take much to see that the problems of three little people don't amount to a hill of bneas in this crazy wrold."

Open Cloze


And this last part is what is often described as the principle of impartiality. And this principle of ____________ manifests itself in all of the world's religions, in all of the different versions of the golden rule, and in all of the world's moral philosophies, which ______ in many ways but share the presupposition that we should judge morality from sort of an impartial _____ of view.

The best articulation of this view is actually, for me, it's not from a theologian or from a philosopher, but from Humphrey Bogart at the end of "Casablanca." So, spoiler alert, he's telling his lover that they have to separate for the more general good, and he says to her, and I won't do the accent, but he says to her, "It doesn't take much to see that the problems of three little people don't amount to a hill of _____ in this crazy _____."

Solution


  1. differ
  2. world
  3. impartiality
  4. point
  5. beans

Original Text


And this last part is what is often described as the principle of impartiality. And this principle of impartiality manifests itself in all of the world's religions, in all of the different versions of the golden rule, and in all of the world's moral philosophies, which differ in many ways but share the presupposition that we should judge morality from sort of an impartial point of view.

The best articulation of this view is actually, for me, it's not from a theologian or from a philosopher, but from Humphrey Bogart at the end of "Casablanca." So, spoiler alert, he's telling his lover that they have to separate for the more general good, and he says to her, and I won't do the accent, but he says to her, "It doesn't take much to see that the problems of three little people don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world."

Frequently Occurring Word Combinations


ngrams of length 2

collocation frequency
great social 2
british adolescents 2
graham crackers 2
compared obama 2
baseball cards 2
black hands 2
changed american 2
american attitudes 2
love thy 2

ngrams of length 3

collocation frequency
changed american attitudes 2


Important Words


  1. accent
  2. alert
  3. amount
  4. articulation
  5. beans
  6. bogart
  7. crazy
  8. differ
  9. general
  10. golden
  11. good
  12. hill
  13. humphrey
  14. impartial
  15. impartiality
  16. judge
  17. lover
  18. manifests
  19. moral
  20. morality
  21. part
  22. people
  23. philosopher
  24. philosophies
  25. point
  26. presupposition
  27. principle
  28. problems
  29. religions
  30. rule
  31. separate
  32. share
  33. sort
  34. spoiler
  35. telling
  36. theologian
  37. versions
  38. view
  39. ways
  40. world