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Common Sense
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Common sense occupies an unusual space in academic writing because it operates as both a philosophical concept and a historical artifact. In composition and rhetoric courses, students examine what common sense means as a form of everyday reasoning — intuitive, logical thinking that guides ordinary decisions. In American history and literature courses, the topic shifts toward Thomas Paine's landmark pamphlet, which argued for American independence and used accessible language to mobilize popular support. The dual nature of the subject makes it relevant across disciplines, from political philosophy and psychology to education and sociology, each treating common sense as something worth questioning rather than simply accepting.

The papers collected here reflect that range of approaches. Some offer rhetorical analysis of Paine's writing, examining how he built arguments for independence and shaped American political identity. Others take a definitional angle, working through what common sense actually means as a mode of thinking. Additional papers apply the concept to contemporary scenarios — workplace behavior, law enforcement hiring, school policy, and responses to events like terrorism or natural disasters — treating common sense as a practical standard against which real decisions can be measured. A smaller group explores regional identity and educational philosophy, using common sense as a lens for broader social questions.

A strong essay on this topic begins by establishing which version of common sense it addresses: the philosophical concept, the historical pamphlet, or a practical standard in a specific context. Evidence carries more weight when it is specific — close reading of Paine's text, concrete case examples, or grounded reasoning about human behavior. The most common pitfall is treating common sense as self-evident, which circular reasoning undermines rather than supports a thesis.

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English Writer Humanist, William Hazlitt, Famously Wrote
This paper compares and contrasts the different types of prejudiced behavior exhibited in the fictional novel by Pete Hamill entitled Snow in August versus David Eggers' work of nonfiction entitled Zeitoun. Hamill's work is set safely in the past, and focuses on Irish Catholic and Jewish tension in New York City. Eggers chronicles the story of a Syrian-American hero during the aftermath of Katrina who was wrongly apprehended without charges because of his race.
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Community Policing Is a Philosophy That Endorses
Community policing is a point of view that endorses organizational strategies, which support the orderly use of partnerships and problem-solving techniques, to proactively address the immediate conditions that give rise to public safety issues such as crime, social disorder, and fear of crime. The point is for everyone to work together to reduce crime.
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Ephesians 5:22-33 an Exegesis of Ephesians 5:22-33
This paper provides an exegesis of Ephesians 5:22-33. It analyzes and interprets St. Paul's imperatives to be wives and husbands. It also provides historical, social, and literary context to better help the reader understand St. Paul's Epistle. By placing the passage in its proper context, St. Paul's commands become clear.
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Factors affecting mobile device and wireless security implementation
This paper talks about the different factors that can affect mobile security and what steps should be taken to prevent them. It explains in detail about what is needed for implementing security such as software and a change in user behavior to ensure that unauthorized users and hackers do not have access to the device as well as the network in which it operates.
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Paine Thomas Paine\'s Political, Religious,
Thomas Paine's political, religious, and social philosophy burst upon the late eighteenth century scene to great acclaim. He emerged as one of the primary leaders of the Western enlightenment and played a role in both…
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John Cheever's "The Swimmer" and Katherine Mansfield's "The Garden Party
The common thread that seems to be woven throughout Katherine Mansfield's Garden Party Stories, and John Cheever's The Swimmer, is that affluence and social status have the potential to be limiting and destructive.
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Revolution in Rousseau and Burke:
Revolution in Rousseau and Burke: How Different Truly Were Their Views?
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Genetically Engineered Crops and the Third World
¶ … genetically engineered crops, or genetically modified (GM) foods, as they are often called. Specifically it will discuss why genetically engineered crops will help residents of the Third World.
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Official Legal Definition of Contradiction
¶ … official legal definition of contradiction is that there exists between two ideas an incompatibility and evident opposition of two idea which share the subject of one and the same proposition.
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What Every Engineer Should Know About Ethics
Kenneth K. Humphreys' book, What Every Engineer should Know about Ethics, is a fairly useful and comprehensive guide to the ethics and ethical codes involved in modern engineering. He begins his book with a chapter…