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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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Research Paper Doctorate
Paradox of confirmation bias in decision-making
Paradoxes seem to form the essence of irrationality and to continuously prove that rationality has a limit and that rationally inducing a fact may in fact prove the fact wrong. What is in fact a paradox?
Research Paper Doctorate
American revolution: causes, events, and outcomes
American Revolution: A conservative, successful Revolution of the haves against those who had more
Research Paper Doctorate
Tests and measurements in educational assessment
The activities of the classrooms are revealed to the learners, instructors and the institutions through administering normalized tests. They encompass gathered knowledge in reading, mathematics, and English for learners…
Research Paper Doctorate
Motivation in schools: factors and applications
Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic Motivation in Schools
Research Paper Doctorate
sovereinty of God
Many Christians struggle with the issue of God's supremacy as opposed to the apparent free will that the same God has given to humanity. The Garden of Eden seems to be a case in point.
Research Paper Doctorate
Antitrust legislation and enforcement
Anti-trust Legislation believe that anti-trust legislation should be reformed. The main reasons for it are that the 19th century antitrust laws, i.e. Sherman Act, 1890 and Clayton Act, 1914, currently cannot be applied…
Research Paper Doctorate
Value Theory: Marx, Menger, Ricardo, Say, and Smith
Value theory has been interpreted and described in many different manners throughout the course of history. There are classical theorists, early classical theorists and socialists, and even those who are categorized as…
Research Paper Undergraduate
To Kill a Mockingbird
Sociology has tried to inquire into the profound need people invariably feel to classify, to put a label on their fellow humans, to asses where they stand in their relationships with others, to what group they belong.
Research Paper Doctorate
Totalitarianism Hannah Arendt, in Her Book, Origins
Hannah Arendt, in her book, "Origins of Totalitarianism," attributes the formation of a mass society in Europe in the first decades of the 20th century to "grassroots eruptions" from a number of collective groups.
Paper Undergraduate
Gender as a cultural construction
Subculture therefore refers to social groups that are organized around shared/common practices and interests. The term has often been used in positioning certain specific social groups as well as the study of such kinds of groups. In this paper, we compare and contrast and analyze the works of Geertz (2000) and Hebrige (1979) on the concept of subculture.