Consider the linear system where A is invertible. Suppose an error changes b to Let be the solution to the new system; that is, Let so that represents the resulting error in the solution of the system. Show that Consider the linear system where A is invertible.Suppose an error changes b toLet be the solution to the new system; that is,Let so that representsthe resulting error in the solution of the system.Show that
Beagley 1 Madyson Beagley Writ 101 23 September 2016 Decisions Are Everything The latest romantic novel sits accompanied by fake, plastic pumpkins upon the autumn themed shelves of bookstores everywhere. The readers flood into those bookstores in a statement of loyalty to and love for the author. As they do so, the world is reminded of what it took for that author to attain such a following. Authors, whether of essays, letters, novels, or speeches are acutely aware of their rhetorical situations and their minds are awake to who is reading and listening. The “rhetors” make conscious decisions as to how they write in order to appeal to a certain audience. Readers and listeners gather as an audience at whichever genre station they find appealing. The category of the material dictates exactly who the audience is and how they react to the material. The audience’s existence alone makes rhetorical situation an attainable idea for a rhetor. In the four works, “Letter from Birmingham Jail”, “Beauty in the Bathroom”, “A Few Words About Breasts”, and “The Rhetorical Situation”, the authors don’t simply write, rather, they keenly acknowledge their genre, audience, and rhetorical situation by making conscious decisions pertaining to how they write. Martin Luther King Jr. displays his awareness of genre, audience, and rhetorical situation in many instances in “Letter from Birmingham Jail.” to so effectiv