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Ambition
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Ambition is the drive to achieve goals, attain success, or rise beyond one's current circumstances, and it appears as a subject of study across a wide range of academic disciplines. Students in literature, psychology, business, and personal development courses all engage with it, whether analyzing how it shapes characters and narratives or examining how it functions in real human lives. It is academically interesting precisely because ambition sits at the intersection of individual psychology and social forces — touching on fear, fate, family expectations, and cultural definitions of what it means to be successful, particularly in contexts like America where upward mobility carries strong ideological weight.

The papers collected here approach ambition from several distinct angles. Literary analysis is common, with works like Julius Caesar serving as a lens for examining how unchecked ambition drives plot and theme. Personal and reflective writing also appears frequently, including personal statements that frame ambition in terms of individual identity, parental influence, and life goals. Other papers take a more applied or case-study approach, looking at ambition within business and organizational contexts, while some explore it through the lens of social constructs like gender inequality, asking whose ambition is rewarded and why.

A strong essay on ambition needs a focused thesis that moves beyond simply calling ambition "good" or "bad" and instead argues something specific about how it operates under particular conditions. Evidence drawn from close textual analysis, historical examples, or well-reasoned personal experience tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating ambition as a fixed trait rather than a dynamic force shaped by circumstance, culture, and consequence.

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Paper Undergraduate
Social mobility: patterns, causes, and consequences
In conducting any type of study, the researcher chooses his or her topic for a variety of reasons. In addition to personal interest, academic viability and applicability is also an important consideration for the choice…
Essay Doctorate
Analysis of current environmental psychology research and contemporary issues
As a brief introduction of this study, environmental psychology pertains to the Correlational approach and linkages that are focused on the relationship between human being and their environment.
Paper Doctorate
Organizational Behavior Avoiding Common Pitfalls
Avoiding Common Pitfalls in Workplace Decision Making
Paper Doctorate
Fences August Wilson Breaking Out: Autonomous Independence
In August Wilson's Fences, the characterization of Cory is used to reinforce the notion of fierce independence that is highly akin to that of his father, Troy. However, Wilson utilizes this independence to demonstrate that Cory's every move to distance himself from his father merely brings him closer to him. In that respect, it is harder for the Cory to break the cycle of mediocrity that his father, and grandfather were engaged in.
Paper Undergraduate
Slavery for Plato and Aristotle
Similarly, Plato finds slavery to be a more natural institution for some people by way of observation, that some are more predisposed towards slavery than others. This is shown in his typologies of government. In Plato's state, there are leaders and there are followers. The followers (slaves) do not have the negative connotations we associate with that in the modern world – they simply have a different focus and set of gifts to contribute to society. Plato goes much further in hypothesizing that the majority in a society should be followers with a few strong and wise leaders to guide them.
Essay Doctorate
Rwandan Genocide a Philosophical Theory (Jean-Jacques Rousseau\'s
Rousseau's theodicy provides a very engaging lens with which to view the tragedy of the Rwandan genocide that took place in 1994. The notions of self-love that the author believes are at the root of human behavior can actually provide curative solutions to this dilemma. Doing so requires temperance, substantial educational reform, and greater levels of national solidarity.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Hermann Goering Was the Second
Hermann Goering was the second most important actor during the Third Reich as he was designated to be the successor of Hitler. He was the commander of the Luftwaffe, the German Air Force, and thus the military relevance…
Paper Doctorate
Abu Dhabi Has Been Busy
Abu Dhabi has been busy reforming its health system since 2001 with its inception of the General Authority for Health Services (GAHS). Until then, healthcare had been largely managed by the government who had controlled…
Paper Doctorate
A critique of utilitarianism
Utilitarianism is based on the principal that every action should be made to create the happiest outcome for the greatest number of people; the value of anything is based on function.
Research Paper Undergraduate
The role of the supernatural in Macbeth and Hamlet
The role of supernatural in Elizabethan drama cannot be underestimated or overlooked. It was a critical part of the plot as we see in Shakespearean work and for the audiences in those days, supernatural was not…