Essay Topic Hub

Buddhism
Essays

652+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

652 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Buddhism is one of the world's major religious and philosophical traditions, originating with the teachings of the Buddha and centered on concepts such as suffering, impermanence, and the nature of existence. Students engage with this topic across religious studies, philosophy, history, and cultural studies courses. Its academic interest lies in both its internal complexity — including the distinction between Theravada and Mahayana traditions — and its relationships with other belief systems such as Hinduism and Jainism. Buddhism also attracts interdisciplinary attention, connecting religious thought to fields like neuroscience, where questions about neuroplasticity intersect with meditative practice, and to the arts, as seen in works like the Cleveland Green Tara painting from 13th-century Central Tibet.

Student papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Comparative essays are especially common, examining shared characteristics between Buddhism and Hinduism, or contrasting Buddhist concepts like dukkha with Christian notions of sin. Some papers focus on specific traditions, analyzing Theravada and Mahayana branches side by side. Others take a cultural or sociological angle, exploring how Buddhism is practiced in the United States or how its ideas appear in films such as Rashomon, I Heart Huckabees, Little Buddha, and Wheel of Time. Historical and art-historical approaches also appear, grounding Buddhist thought in material and visual culture.

A strong essay on Buddhism begins with a clearly scoped thesis — choosing one tradition, concept, or comparison rather than attempting to survey the entire religion. Evidence drawn from core teachings about suffering and existence tends to carry more weight than broad generalizations. The most common pitfall is treating Buddhism as a monolithic system, so acknowledging meaningful differences across regional and doctrinal traditions strengthens any argument significantly.

652 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
World\'s Religions -- Social Duty
World's Religions -- social duty & responsibility
Research Paper Undergraduate
Cambodia: history, culture, and contemporary society
¶ … history of Cambodia, including the Pol Pot Regime and Angkor Wat. Cambodia is an Asian country located between Vietnam and Thailand with a coastline on the Gulf of Thailand. In the 1860s, it became a colony of…
Paper Undergraduate
Buddhism in the Following Films:
Buddhism in "Rashomon" & "I Heart Huckabees"
Paper Doctorate
Buddhism in James Ure\'s Opinion,
In James Ure's opinion, precepts should not be followed as if they were unbreakable rules, as they are actually concepts meant to assist an individual throughout his or her life so as for him or her to suffer as little…
Paper Doctorate
China's Rule of Law: Democracy, Economy, and Reform
This paper examines the rule of law in today's China as the nation prepares itself on the world stage and attempts to ease the strain in the East-West relationship. China hopes to be perceived as a nation stepping away from subjective authoritarianism (such as appeared under Mao) and toward a kind objective and democratic governance.
Essay Doctorate
Common characteristics Jainism shares with Hinduism and Buddhism
¶ … familiar with the religions of Buddhism and Hinduism but the religion of Jainism, although enjoying nearly as many members, is not as well-known. Similarly, most know something about the practices and beliefs of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Buddhism the Foundations and Travels
The foundations and travels of world philosophies and religions are often bound by the ascetic images, as they are demonstrated by the different cultures of the periods in which they travel.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Native Americans and Korean Americans: comparative experiences
Native Americans and Korean-Americans are separated by tens of thousands of years when it comes to immigration to the Americas.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Cremation Refers to the Burning
Cremation refers to the burning of the human body until fire destroys the soft parts (Davies 2003). Anthropologists consider it a double burial. It consists of coping with the body and its decay in the first and…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Scientology: history, beliefs, and organizational structure
Scientology may be one of the most controversial modern religions, its late founder L. Ron Hubbard one of modern history's most contentious writers and spiritual leaders. The Church of Scientology was founded in 1954…