Three Tragic Voices of Urdu Poetry: Shakeb Jalali, Mustafa Zaidi, and Sara Shagufta Introduction Urdu literature has produced some of the most sensitive and powerful poetic voices in South Asia. Among these, three poets stand out not only for their remarkable work but also for the tragic way their lives ended. Shakeb Jalali, Mustafa Zaidi, and Sara Shagufta each brought a unique style and perspective to Urdu poetry, but all three died by suicide, leaving behind a legacy of unfulfilled potential and haunting verse. Shakeb Jalali (1934–1966) Shakeb Jalali, born Syed Hassan Rizvi, was a deeply introspective poet whose work explored themes of alienation, pain, and the search for identity. Despite his limited output, his ghazals and nazms resonated with an intensity rarely seen in Urdu poetry. On 12 November 1966, at the age of 32, Jalali committed suicide by throwing himself in front of a train near Sargodha. His poetry, full of raw emotion, has since become symbolic of the stru...
Is there any sources that has mentioned if more than 0.95 is the answer on normality test, the study is still reliable?
The interpretation of normality tests, such as the Shapiro-Wilk test or the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, depends on various factors, and there isn't a universal threshold that applies to all situations. The choice of significance level (commonly set at 0.05) is somewhat arbitrary, and p-values close to this threshold should be interpreted cautiously. In practice, the decision on whether data can be considered approximately normally distributed often depends on the context of the analysis and the assumptions of the statistical methods being used. A p-value slightly above 0.05 might not necessarily imply a departure from normality that would seriously impact the validity of the analysis. It's essential to consider the specific requirements of the statistical methods you are using and the robustness of those methods to deviations from normality. It's worth noting that normality is an assumption for some parametric statistical tests (e.g., t-tests, ANOVA), and violating this as...