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Analysis and Opinion

Webpages concerning "Analysis and Opinion"

Criticism.com presents a book review of Read All About It: The Corporate Takeover of America's Newspapers. Bookstore included.
http://www.criticism.com
Keywords:
criticism, discourse analysis, linguistics, books, media criticism, Max Weber, Bakhtin, mass communication, media studies, media theory, journalism, sociology, newspapers, culture, advertising, film, semiology, structuralism, postmodernism, Saussure, poststructuralism, media sociology, sociolinguistics, Steve Hoenisch, book reviews, Roland Barthes, Weber, Dostoyevsky, objectivity, ...

http://www.criticism.com

Media Research Center (MRC) is a conservative media watchdog group dedicated to bringing political balance to the news and entertainment media.
http://www.mediaresearch.org/
Keywords:
conservative, media, bias, media bias, cyberalert, media research center, liberal bias, brent bozell, bozell, l brent bozell, media watchdog, network news, news bias, taxes, videos, free market, reality check, media reality check, news

http://www.mediaresearch.org/

Newcity Chicago is your comprehensive guide to Chicago news, arts, entertainment and nightlife. Updated daily, Newcitychicago.com contains extensive listings as well as the legendary Best of Chicago issues.
http://www.newcity.com/newcity/content/current/media_archive.html
Keywords:
Chicago culture, visiting Chicago, Sears Tower, tourism in Chicago, Chicago trip planning, Chicago Nightlife, International video emporiums, Newcity's Extra Raw, Chicago Classifieds, Modern Romance, Web board, Raw Material, Chris Jones, Dave Chamberlain, James Porter, Lucia Mauro, Catey Sullivan, Sam Weller, Mitch Myers, Newcity daily columns, Chicago, Chicago newspaper, Chicago arts, ...

http://www.newcity.com/newcity/content/current/media_archive.html

Number Watch monitors the media in search of misleading numbers in news, politics and science
http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/
Keywords:
statistics, media, politics, numbers, lies, scams, junk-science

http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/

The bewildered herd media coverage of international conflicts and public opinion, book reviews, author, order and download information, excerpts, selected readings and alternative media links. All about media agendas and public opinion influence
http://www.thebewilderedherd.com
Keywords:
bewildered herd, bewildered, media, and, public, opinion, media and agendas, media agendas, political agendas, conflict, war, media and war, public opinion, society, hierarchy, advantages, disadvatages, control agent, relationship, news and war, media select

http://www.thebewilderedherd.com

MEDIA VISIONS JOURNAL by Ken Freed features articles, essays and interviews about interactive media and tyhe power of our interactivity. Introducing the ebook 'Global Sense' by Ken Freed, updating 'Common Sense' by Tom Paine for these modern times of crisis that try our souls.
http://www.media-visions.com/
Keywords:
globalsense, liberty, democracy, freedom, media, visions, vision, mediavisions, ken, freed, ken freed, kenfreed, global sense, common sense, tom paine, thomas paine, terrorism, world, peace, world peace, wordlpeace, the enlightenment, deep media literacy, deep literacy, literacy, self, rule, self rule, self-rule, selfrule, libertarian, liberal, conservative, culture, culture war, interactive, ...

http://www.media-visions.com/

Brave News World: Because Corporations Make Poor Journalists
http://www.flash.net/~pieper
Keywords:
Brave News World, Chris Pieper, progressive commentary, left-wing analysis, cultural studies, media studies

http://www.flash.net/~pieper

Polls, public opinion research, national surveys on public attitudes toward press, politics, public policy issues; funded by Pew Charitable Trusts. Pew Research Center tracks trends in values, political and social attitudes.
http://www.people-press.org/
Keywords:
Pew, Pew Research Center, Andy Kohut, Andrew Kohut, polls, surveys, public opinion, public opinion surveys, public opinion research, polling, public opinion polls, Pew polls

http://www.people-press.org/

http://stephen.macek.faculty.noctrl.edu/

http://stephen.macek.faculty.noctrl.edu/

http://www.becomethemedia.com

http://www.becomethemedia.com

http://www.mediageek.org/

http://www.mediageek.org/

http://www.cybercampfire.com/

http://www.cybercampfire.com/

http://www.geocities.com/amaserwah/index.html

http://www.geocities.com/amaserwah/index.html

http://jolo.jmk.su.se/students/global04/mediaday/index.htm

http://jolo.jmk.su.se/students/global04/mediaday/index.htm

http://rittenhouse.blogspot.com

http://rittenhouse.blogspot.com

http://www.nyu.edu/classes/stephens/Articles\\%20page.htm

http://www.nyu.edu/classes/stephens/Articles\\%20page.htm

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Wikipedia-Article "Analysis"

Look up Analysis in Wiktionary, the free dictionary

An analysis is a critical evaluation, usually made by breaking a subject (either material or intellectual) down into its constituent parts, then describing the parts and their relationship to the whole. See also analytic and synthesis and the Scientific Method.

As such, it can be applied in many different fields of study:

In other fields:

This article is based on the article "Analysis" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.

Wikipedia-Article "Opinion"

Look up Opinion in Wiktionary, the free dictionary

An opinion is a person's ideas and thoughts towards something. It is an assessment, judgement or evaluation of something. An opinion is not a fact, because it is not possible to prove (or disprove) an opinion.

For example, one may claim that strawberry is a better tasting flavor of ice cream than vanilla. Another might claim that vanilla is a better tasting flavor. (If you disagree with either of these opinions, substitute chocolate, butter pecan, or whichever flavor of ice cream you think tastes better than vanilla, for my use of strawberry.) The original claim is an opinion; it is neither true nor false, it is simply a claim which can neither be proved nor disproved. Now, if one claims that strawberry is a more popular flavor than vanilla, that is no longer an opinion, it is a fact, which can be proved, (or in this case disproved) by showing another fact, that more vanilla ice cream is sold than strawberry. (The presumption being that people buy ice cream in order to consume it, thus, more purchases of vanilla would indicate vanilla is more popular than strawberry since people would not purchase ice cream simply to throw it away.)

The issue of whether strawberry ice cream tastes better than vanilla ice cream is still, however, arbitrary and nonprovable, and thus remains an opinion (as would the opposite opinion that vanilla ice cream tastes better than strawberry. Note that simply because a particular opinion is more popular still does not make the opposite opinion incorrect or wrong). It would not be permissible for someone else to claim that either opinion on which tastes better is wrong because opinions are still arbitrary and can neither be proved nor disproved. It is permissible to state that one disagrees with the opinion. It is, however permissible to claim that the statement that strawberry is more popular than vanilla is wrong, because it is a claim of a fact, the claim having been contradicted by one or more other facts.

Opinions can either be made up by a person or taken over from another person. Sometimes some people try to force their opinions on others. In general, all people are free to form opinions as they see fit. However, in certain political regimes, it may not be advisable to express certain opinions openly. In economics, philosophy, or other social sciences, analysis based on opinions is referred to as normative analysis (what ought to be), as opposed to positive analysis, which is based on observation (what is). Not all schools of thought find this distinction useful.

In judicial practice

In the US judiciary, opinion is the word used for a higher court's published decision which establishes new legal precedent, or supersedes or reverses existing precedent. Cases decided by the US Supreme Court, for example, sometimes become well-known because they express the court's "opinion" on how federal law (or the Constitution) is to be interpreted, which can have very wide implications (e.g. Roe v. Wade). This usage of the word opinion is different from the common usage (outside the legal field), because the court's opinion is not the opinion of any person, but the court's decision after careful deliberation of the case, and is binding on relevant future cases in lower courts. Other appeals courts, such as state appeals courts, also file opinions which serve the same function at the state level. An opinion can also be published at the insistence of a dissenting judge on the case.

Not every case decided by a higher court results in the publication of an opinion; in fact most do not, since an opinion is usually only published when the law is being interpreted in a novel way, or the case is a high-profile matter of general public interest and the court wishes to make the details of its ruling public. In the majority of cases, the judges issue what is called a memorandum opinion instead, which simply points out how state or federal law applies to the case and affirms or reverses the decision of the lower court. A memorandum opinion does not establish legal precedent or re-interpret the law, and cannot be invoked in subsequent cases to justify a ruling. Opinions, on the other hand, always establish a particular legal interpretation. It is important to remember that, in the United States, a state appeals court does not re-evaluate the facts of the case, but is called on (according to the appellant's specific reason for appeal) to decide whether the law was applied correctly, or if there were errors in the trial process that invalidate the verdict or entitle the plaintiff or defendant to a new trial.

See also

This article is based on the article "Opinion" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.