Theology

  • November 2019
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Jhunnellen C. Sanchez BS. Computer Science

MWF/07:00-08:00

1.) The church promotes petrified

= All of the religion have creeds, codes and cults. These are c’s can have a paralyzing effect on us. They can prevent us from arriving at the care of religion, which includes the experience of being in contact with, carried by and encompassed by the Divine, the Sacred , God.

2.) The church is clerical

= The church seems to be led by a fearsome group of men, who are dressed in clerical garb and who have some sort of absolute and sacred power. These patriarch are in control of our Church’s institution and perform some mysterious sacred rite’s, which communicate “sacred goods”. Lay people specially women, are at receiving end only. Clerics preach, perform sacrament and rule the flock, while the laity listen, receive sacrament or pray and pay, and obey whatever the patriarch say.

3.) The church is rich and powerful

= Most priest and religious live a comfortable middle-class life and do not seem to be disturbed by the poverty of so many of our people. The church seems to side with the powerful and the rich. It plays the game of the politicians and tries to stay at the top of our Philippine Society.

4.) The church is foreign

= The church is an imported entity within Filipino culture. The Spanish colonization was led by the friars. In the neo-colonial period, new Church leaders were imported. They took the side of the American neo-colonial power. Our present-day Church continues to be dependent on Rome and on Western world.

Jhunnellen C. Sanchez BS. Computer Science

Mr. Bustillos

Computer System = A computer system is the combination of hardware and software.A typical computer system has memory and set of states that define the relationship between the system's inputs and outputs. Although in earlier times the personan computer or PC was an example of a computer system, in practice a person considered a Computer Systems Engineer these days deals with a range of different computer architectures. Even the simplest computer classifies as a computer system, because at least two components (hardware and software) have to work together. But the real meaning of "computer system" comes with interconnection. Many computer systems can interconnect, that is, join to become a bigger system. In industry these days the interconnection of varible-speed drives and programmable logic controllers (PLCs) to automate production lines and control motors is a common example of a computer system. Interconnecting different computer systems can prove difficult due to incompatibilities. Sometimes these difficulties occur due to incompatibilities between differing hardware and sometimes between differing software. Technically knowledgeable people can configure disparate computers to communicate using a set of rules and constraints known as protocols. Protocols attempt to precisely define the communication within and between computing endpoints. If two computer systems define the same protocols, they may be capable of interconnecting and become a part of a larger system.

Hardware = is the physical part of a computer, including the digital circuitry, as distinguished from the computer software that executes within the hardware. The hardware of a computer is infrequently changed, in comparison with software and data, which are "soft" in the sense that they are readily created, modified or erased on the computer. Firmware is a special type of software that rarely, if ever, needs to be changed and so is stored on hardware devices such as read only memory (ROM) where it is not readily changed (and is, therefore, "firm" rather than just "soft").

Software = consisting of programs, enables a computer to perform specific tasks, as opposed to its physical components (hardware) which can only do the tasks they are mechanically designed for. The term includes application software such as word processors which perform productive tasks for users, system software such as operating systems, which interface with hardware to run the necessary services for user-interfaces and applications, and middleware which controls and co-ordinates distributed systems.

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