Tuesday, March 4, 2014
Blooms Bucks
Propose a plan to solve John Proctor's dilemma of being accused of witchcraft?
- John Proctor could confess to the court what Abigail had told him in Reverend Parris' house and prove to the court that Abigail and the rest of the girls are lieing.
How would you improve John Proctor's situation with him and his wife being accused of witchcraft?
- If John Proctor and Elizabeth Proctor would have had time together to discuss ways to prove to the court that they were innocent they probably would have been set free. A system of rights of the accused could be developed to have a real court trial instead of just punishing people from accusations.
Can you invent a tool to detect whether an accused person is a witch or not?
- A tool could be developed that senses black magic from the peoples souls and could detect if God or the devil is present in their hearts.
How would you adapt the court to create a different system of trying those accused of witchcraft?
- A system of set rights for those accused could be made and the people could have a real trial with evidence and an attorney to determine if they are guilty or innocent.
Discuss your plan to modify and design the court.
- A jury of people from around the community would be selected and brought to the court during the trials to judge if the defendent is innocent or guilty. Also, the accusers could not be present and evidence would be allowed to be used by the defendent.
Can you elaborate on the reasons that the accused would just simply confess rather than deny their accusations?
- Those accused of witchcraft knew that if they didn't confess to performing witchcraft that they would lose in their trials in court and be sentenced to hang rather than serve jail time.
Formulate an original way to compose John Proctor's problem throughout the story.
- John Proctors problems started from the beginning of the crucible and ended when Abigail and the other girls accused him of witchcraft. He was punnished on false accusations along with the other people of Salem.
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