Essay Topic Hub

Enlightenment
Essays

1,195+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,195 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

The Enlightenment refers to the broad intellectual movement that reshaped European thought around the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, emphasizing reason, individual freedom, and the critical examination of tradition and authority. It appears frequently in history courses, as well as in philosophy, political science, and religious studies. Scholars treat it as a pivotal period because its ideas about nature, power, and society helped lay the groundwork for modern democratic governance, scientific inquiry, and secular ethics. Students engage with it to understand how a shift in epistemological priorities — from faith and tradition toward reason and evidence — transformed political structures and cultural institutions across Europe and beyond.

The papers archived on this topic take several distinct approaches. Many focus on cause-and-effect relationships, particularly the Enlightenment's influence on events like the French Revolution and the broader English and American revolutionary contexts. Others adopt comparative frameworks, examining how Enlightenment ideas affected different religious traditions, including Christianity and Islam. Some papers engage with specific texts and concepts, such as Hobbes's Leviathan or questions of just war theory, while others trace the development of the Age of Reason through the work of philosophers more broadly. Historical and thematic overviews of Enlightenment thought in Europe also appear frequently.

A strong essay on this topic requires a focused thesis that moves beyond simply describing Enlightenment ideas and instead argues how or why those ideas produced specific consequences. Primary philosophical texts, historical events, and cross-cultural comparisons carry the most analytical weight. The most common pitfall is treating the Enlightenment as a single, unified movement — strong essays acknowledge internal tensions and variations across different national and religious contexts.

1,195 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Non-governmental organisation placement strategies and practices
The objective of this work is to examine the experience of students on the NGO placement in Nigeria. The NGO at focus is that of St. Joseph Orphanage and Women Development Center. The writer of this work was provided with an excellent opportunity to exam the organization chart and policy of the non-governmental and non-profit organization. In addition, the writer of this work was provided with insight on how the organization raises money to finance and sustain its diverse projects in Nigeria. During the course of job placement of this researcher with this NGO organization, and specifically St. Joseph Women Development and orphanage center it was amazing to realize that Media and Communication organizations play a significant role in the promotion and creation of community awareness and awareness on the national level. Consideration of the barriers that were encountered during the job placement includes those related to language and tradition, which is an effective hindrance when one, is assigned to work in a region such as the northern part of Nigeria where approximately 90% of the population is Muslim.
Paper Masters
Use of Language to Manipulate and Deceive
The purpose of this paper is to explore the connections between deceit and the use of language. By examining written arguments from four sources, an argument is formed supporting the relative use of language. Examples are provided on how the very purpose of language is alternative expression and how it the moral connotations associated are minimal.
Paper Doctorate
Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel Ceiling: Art and Meaning
The paper is about the Sistine Chapel. The paper analyzes the content and the technique used to paint it. The paper also explains some of the context in which the painting was conceived and executed. The paper tries to understand how the painting fits within overall art history, human history, and Renaissance Art. The paper also offers insight into the creative process and experience of Michelangelo.
Essay Doctorate
Victims of Progress John Bodley - Victims
If we realistically assess the present condition of the culture of consumption, it seems likely that this culture, too, will disappear- also a victim of progress, but after a very brief and preposterous career. The important question is: How will the culture of consumption go? Will it be forced to gradually transform itself into a new primitive culture, or will it go out with a total, catastrophic collapse. leaving a shattered world from which a new primitive culture will painfully evolve? Om either event, it may be predicted that in the long run, if humanity survives, primitive culture will be restored as the most viable human adaptation.
Paper Doctorate
The Enlightenment, Religion, and the Rise of Fundamentalism
This is a four page paper on the enlightenment worldview and how it became a threat to orthodoxy. The four page essay does explore how the mindset of fundamentalism led to a defense of orthodoxy, and how the mindset of liberalism led to a remaking of orthodoxy. It talks about all sorts of stuff related to the Enlightenment and Reason, and the limits of Reason, and the minimal threat posed to Christianity.
Paper Doctorate
Buddhism: Meditation, Right Action, and Personal Reflection
This paper discusses Buddhism and the importance of meditation. Those who practice meditation do so in order to achieve enlightenment, nirvana. There are various reasons why Buddhists meditate. It is done to achieve a better understanding of the self and also to understand the world better. Buddhists invite other people to meditate to better their lives.
Paper High School
Natural law theory and philosophical foundations
It would seem that a lot of what constitutes religion, science, sociology and so on is hard to define and ambiguous at times. Take, for instance, fundamentalism in religion, the fact that life is still difficult to define in scientific terms or the complexity of natural law, in Latin, lex naturalis. What each of these three issues have in common is the difficulty they impose on someone trying to get to the bottom of them because there are so many perspectives one could approach them by and none is self sufficient.
Essay Doctorate
Science and Religion in the 17th Century
The Interaction between Science and Religion in the Seventeenth Century:
Essay Doctorate
Greece, a South-Eastern European Country, Is Also
Greece, a south-eastern European country, is also officially known as the Hellenic Republic. The country "occupies the southernmost part of the Balkan Peninsula and borders on the Ionian Sea in the west, on the Mediterranean Sea in the south, on the Aegean Sea in the east, on Turkey and Bulgaria in the northeast, on Macedonia in the north, and on Albania in the northwest" ("Greece," 2012). The largest city and capital of Greece is Athens.
Essay Doctorate
Hawthorne Hooper Suddenly Dons a Mysterious Black
Hawthorne's short story "The Minister's Black Veil" is analyzed in terms of irony, ambiguity, paradox, active evil, determinism, psychological analysis, alienation (isolated character), guilt, pride, Puritan New England, individual vs. society, fate vs. free will, allegory, love vs. hate. The veil symbolizes everything that is wrong with the Great Awakening and puritan christianity.