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Atheism
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Atheism, broadly defined as the absence or rejection of belief in God or gods, is a central subject in philosophy of religion, theology, and ethics courses. Students engage with it because it sits at the intersection of metaphysics, epistemology, and moral theory, raising fundamental questions about the existence of God, the basis of belief, and how humans find meaning without religious frameworks. The topic gains additional academic weight through its relationship to scientific reasoning, particularly debates around evolution and empirical evidence, and through thinkers like Karl Marx, whose critique of religion frames atheism within social and political theory. Works such as C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity appear frequently as counterpoints, giving students a structured theistic argument to analyze and contest.

Papers on this topic take a range of approaches. Comparative and argumentative essays weigh theism against atheism, assessing which position is more philosophically defensible based on logic and evidence. Response-style papers engage directly with specific texts or philosophical articles, evaluating claims about proof, belief, and the limits of scientific knowledge. Other essays explore atheism through broader frameworks, including existentialism, family values, and worldview analysis, treating it as a lens for examining how individuals and societies construct meaning.

A strong essay on atheism establishes a clear, narrow thesis rather than attempting to resolve the entire God debate in one paper. Evidence drawn from philosophical argument, logical consistency, and acknowledged scholarly positions tends to carry more weight than personal conviction alone. The most common pitfall is conflating atheism with related positions such as agnosticism or anti-religion, so defining terms precisely at the outset is essential for maintaining a focused and credible argument.

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Paper Doctorate
The sublime in philosophy and aesthetics
The sublime has been understood in various ways throughout history -- but most simply thus: as greatness beyond all measure. Longinus gave the Western world the first treatise on the sublime, which was essentially a…
Research Paper Doctorate
Philosophies of Religion Generally Fall
Philosophies of religion generally fall into one of two camps: theistic and atheistic views. The former provides proofs or arguments in favor of the existence of God, whereas the latter offers proofs or arguments…
Paper Undergraduate
Humanities concepts and applications
The role of the humanities in the curriculum
Paper Undergraduate
Arrogance of Faith and Atheism:
¶ … arrogance of faith and atheism: Mark Twain's "The Story of the Good Little Boy" and Flannery O'Connor's "Good Country People"
Research Paper Doctorate
Roman View of Christianity
Early Christianity did not develop in isolation, but within a complex landscape already occupied by belief systems, social networks, systems of identity, and political institutions, and it is essential not to regard it…
Paper Undergraduate
Naturalism Most Marxian\'s, in Addition
Most Marxian's, in addition to seeing Marxianism as an emancipator social theory, have also seen it as a worldview. Moreover, they have attached considerable importance to it being a coherent and rationally sustainable worldview. As Wilfrid Sellars and Richard Rorty took philosophers to be doing, and legitimately so, Marxians as well want to see how things hang together in the broadest and most inclusive sense of that term. They want to establish, in doing this, that talk of a Spiritual or Supernatural World is nonsense, or at least a mistake, and, as Marx put it grandly, to establish "the truth of this world" (Rorty, 1976). Some of them were what we now call historicists (Gramsci most clearly), but none of them, not even Otto Neurath, were relativists, skeptics, or what some now call postmodernists, who think that there is no truth of this world, or of any world, to be established. They might, if they could have studied Quine and Davidson, and could have read their Putnam and Rorty, have come to be convinced that there is and can be no one uniquely true description of the world.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Counterpoint: Murder as an Effect
Theistic religion is the basis of modern concepts of law and human morality. The prohibition against murder is one of the Ten Commandments, and is a universal moral concept even among the many different religious belief…
Research Paper Doctorate
History/Social Science Textbook Controversy History
The controversy with textbooks has been plaguing our education systems far longer than many people realize. Beginning as far back as the 40s there have been disagreements over content and editing of textbooks,…
Paper Doctorate
Response to the McCloskey article on economic methodology
When dealing with the subject of religion or spirituality the idea of philosophical or logical proof is not always applicable. If an individual believes in the existence of a Supreme Being, they do so based on faith – on their feelings and need to believe, most certainly not because there is a concrete syllogism to prove God as a fact. Faith, in fact, cannot be philosophically correct, nor can it be incorrect because it is based on feelings. One cannot persuade someone with faith not to believe, most of the time any logical argument has no point because of the individual's unquestioning faith in the existence of a Higher Power. An atheist, on the other hand, cannot intrinsically believe in a "thing" or "being" that has never physically appeared to them, or with finite proof.
Paper High School
Ad to Present the Civil
Julia Ward Howe composed her "Battle Hymn of the Republic" to the tune of "John Brown's Body," which the Union soldiers sang in the Civil War. John Brown had been a controversial figure -- and one whose sanity was…