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Greed
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Greed is the excessive desire for wealth, power, or material gain beyond what is needed or deserved, and it appears as a subject across a wide range of academic disciplines. Students in ethics, business, literature, sociology, and humanities courses all encounter it because it sits at the intersection of individual psychology and broader social consequences. What makes greed academically compelling is how it operates at multiple levels simultaneously — shaping personal choices, institutional behavior, and entire economies. Its relevance to American society in particular makes it a recurring subject, with business scandals, financial crises, and cultural narratives all offering concrete material for analysis.

The papers collected here approach greed from notably varied angles. Some focus on corporate and financial case studies, examining events like the Enron scandal, the Bernard Madoff fraud, and the collapse surrounding figures connected to Lehman Brothers and Wall Street. Others take a literary or cinematic lens, analyzing works like the novel McTeague or the film adaptation of The Crucible for how they dramatize moral corruption. Still others engage with ethical frameworks, weighing whether a survival-of-the-fittest mentality can be reconciled with responsible leadership. Policy-oriented pieces address institutional failures, including large-scale financial bailouts and the business practices of major corporations like Walmart.

A strong essay on greed needs a focused thesis that connects individual behavior to a larger systemic or moral consequence — simply defining greed is not enough. Evidence drawn from specific events, texts, or documented cases carries far more weight than broad generalizations about human nature. The most common pitfall is treating greed as self-evidently bad without analyzing the structures that enable or reward it, which weakens the argument's depth and originality.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Peak Oil When M. King
When M. King Hubbard recognized that oil fields actually peak and then decline in their output, and that global oil production also reached a pinnacle before declining, he coined the term "peak oil," ("Oil Depletion").
Paper Doctorate
Blue Collar vs. White Collar Crime There
This paper looks at the two major divisions of crimes, white collar versus blue collar and how they differ in some key areas. The paper examines the types of crimes and the reason those types are different, the victims associated with the different types of crime, and then how sentencing is carried out. The conclusion wraps up the entire paper.
Research Paper Doctorate
Discuss the Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe as a book rooted in the New Testament As well as being a product of lewis personal interpretation of spiritual truth
The story revolves around the four Pevensie children, Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy. Their parents send them to live in the relatively safer English countryside during World War II.
Research Paper Doctorate
Problems and solutions in organizational contexts
¶ … Environmental problems today are extremely serious, and although the world's focus is on the more severe of these problems and attempts are being made everywhere, all over the world, to solve these problems at least…
Paper Undergraduate
Great Gatsby the Moral Wasteland
The moral wasteland depicted in the Great Gatsby stems from the decadence of a generation of people that are submerged in a pool of greed with a limitless supply of things that bring them pleasure.
Paper Doctorate
Raisin in the Sun Significance
Lorraine Hansberry was an African American playwright of the 1950s. This famous play was first dramatized in 1959 and created a new place for the Afro American Authors in the literary world. The play won Lorraine a Drama Circle Critics Choice Award and made her a renowned writer. The title of the play came from a poem by ‘Langston Hughes' called ‘Harlem.' The poem contains a verse that goes like this: "What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun?" (Lewis, 2012). The poem also showcased the frustration and resentment born among the black people because of ‘deferred' dreams. It shows that this happened due to the discrimination practiced against them. Similarly the play's title symbolizes unfulfilled dreams of the Younger family. Just like the raisin dries up in the sun, the scorching sun of the era's conditions has dried up, shriveled or shrunk the Younger family's hopes of success and a better future.
Paper Undergraduate
Wal-Mart Videos Both of These
Both of these videos point to the ultra-greed of one of America's most successful businesses, and how consumers will ignore just about anything as long as they receive low prices. I do shop at Wal-Mart, but only…
Paper Doctorate
Housing Support on Teenager Parents Housing Support
This paper is about housing support on teenagers parents. People of Europe wanted Freedom, Equality and Fraternity in 1800. To achieve Freedom, the philosophers and social scientists advocated sexual freedom desirous for high growth and development. Utilitarian philosophers created Capitalism and Socialism to achieve Freedom, Equality and Fraternity; the economic theories under capitalism or Socialism may differ but sexual freedom was advocated commonly by the social scientists. Sexual Freedom gained momentum after the 2nd World War. Media supported these ideas (sexual freedom) challenging the religious restrictions on sexual relationships.
Paper Doctorate
Concert critiques and musical analysis
Concert UNLV Wind Orchestra and Chamber Ensemble
Research Paper Undergraduate
Chinatown Roman Polanski\'s Chinatown Roman
Roman Polanski's Chinatown is a movie about greed and corruption in local government. It tells the story of a private detective, played by Jack Nicholson, who specializes in matrimonial cases.