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Metaphysics
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Metaphysics is a foundational branch of philosophy concerned with the nature of existence, reality, truth, and knowledge. It appears across courses in philosophy, the history of ideas, and even science and nursing theory, since questions about what fundamentally exists shape how disciplines frame their core concepts. The topic is academically compelling because it pushes inquiry beyond what the senses can confirm, asking how reason alone can establish truths about the world. Figures such as Plato, Aristotle, Kant, Heidegger, St. Anselm, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche appear frequently in this conversation, and texts like Kant's Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics serve as direct entry points into debates about the limits of human understanding.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Comparative essays set major thinkers against one another, such as examining Heidegger's ontology alongside St. Anselm's, or contrasting Kant's categorical imperative with Kierkegaard's conception of faith. Other papers adopt a problem-centered approach, focusing on debates between libertarianism and determinism or the relationship between metaphysics and psychology. Some writers apply metaphysical frameworks to specific figures like Aleister Crowley read through a Nietzschean lens, while others connect metaphysical theory to practical fields such as education philosophy or Jean Watson's theory of human caring.

A strong essay on metaphysics begins with a precise, arguable thesis rather than a broad claim about "existence" or "reality." Evidence typically comes from close reading of primary philosophical texts, with logical analysis of how concepts like reason, knowledge, and experience are defined and defended. The most common pitfall is treating metaphysical positions as merely abstract opinion; grounding claims in the internal logic of a specific thinker's argument produces far more rigorous and convincing work.

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Essay Doctorate
Philosophy Matrix II Ancient Quest for Truth
Philosophy Matrix II: Ancient Quest for Truth Historical review of human knowledge shows, at least in part, an unsteady progression from myth to half-scientific, half-philosophical thoughts to philosophy, culminating in the teachings of Plato and Aristotle and beyond them in the teachings of Plotinus. Pre-Socratic Philosophers such as Pythagorus, Heraclitus, Parmenides, Melissus, Zeno and Anaxagoras rejected mythological explanations of life and beyond, choosing to explore the rational explanations about the "essence" of things. As a result, Pre-Socratic philosophers, posed questions, posited theories, borrowed from each other, expanded on each other's theories and often disagreed. This early Greek Philosophy continued to develop until it "flowered in the two great philosophies of Plato and Aristotle." Plato and Aristotle considered theories of Pre-Socratic philosophers and rejected, explained, synthesized and incorporated elements of those theories as they saw fit. Plato built on Pre-Socratic Philosophy's stress of the rational and moral by his expanded theories of knowledge in 4 steps along a divided line, his Doctrine of Forms, which were deemed an "enormous advance" on prior pre-Socratic theories, and his theory of morality that expanded prior thought to point to "an absolute moral code." Aristotle built on Pre-Socratic Philosophy by further synthesizing the Doctrine of Forms, developing his First Principle and Theory of Ethics, for several examples. In sum, the philosophies of Plato and Aristotle are deemed an early and highly significant culmination of human thought's progression from myth to philosophy.
Research Paper Doctorate
Do Heidegger\'s Political Views Influence His Metaphysical Views?
This paper examines the relationship between Martin Heidegger's metaphysical views and his political views (which were in support of National Socialism in Germany from the years 1933-1945). Heidegger had been a fervent Catholic in 1910, but he embraced the doctrine of the Modernists and thus turned towards the expression of "Being" offered by the National Socialists.
Essay Doctorate
Church Fathers Do You Find the Most
The majority of people have a tendency to perceive a church father as being a person obsessed with religion and dedicated to promoting God's words regardless of the fact that they agree to them or not. However, there are some influential individuals in the history of Christianity who actually went much further than to act in agreement with stereotypes and who challenged most people's understanding of Christian thinking. Augustine of Hippo is one of the most influential characters in the history of Western Christianity and he is largely responsible for thinking in a series of modern-day Christians, taking into account that he made it possible for people to employ rational thinking when coming across Christian ideas.
Paper Undergraduate
Kant and Mill on Happiness and Moral Philosophy
For the philosopher Kant, happiness is something that is rather ambiguous -- that is, happiness is not black or white, but rather, many different shades of grey, depending on the person.
Essay Doctorate
Existence of God the Philosophical Questions I
The great monotheistic religions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam profoundly influenced Western philosophy. In all of these religions, the existence of God is a central claim. For nearly a millennium from 500 S.D to about 1500 A.D., Western philosophy was the handmaiden of Christian theology. (Jordan, 567) During this period, the issue of existence of God seemed to be of paramount importance. Proofs were needed to convince infidels and beretics and to retain the faithful. In the more secular world since the Renaissance, these arguments for the existence of God have been severely challenged.
Paper Undergraduate
Human Society -- Economic or State Power
¶ … Human Society -- Economic or State Power
Research Paper Undergraduate
Kant\'s Philosophy We Are Bombarded
We are bombarded with questions daily about different issue in our society like the justice of our foreign policy, the morality behind medical technologies that can prolong our lives, the rights of the homeless, the…
Paper Undergraduate
Kant's philosophical contributions and thought
Kant identifies three kinds of motivation: from duty, immediate inclination, and further end. A real life example of duty motivation would be as follows. A person is in the grocery store shopping and they notice that a…
Research Paper Doctorate
Comparison of Plato and Aristotle\'s Political Theories
The most capacious account of Plato's established philosophical views has been published in "The Republic" as a comprehensive handling of the most basic values for the behavior of human life.
Paper High School
William Blake and Religion William
This study examines William Blake's relation to Emanuel Swedenborg, and in particular how their respective considerations of heaven and hell relate to human expression or repression. Blake takes some inspiration from Swedenborg but condemns the latter's tendency to reiterate dogma and moral codes. In contrast to Swedenborg, Blake celebrates human expression and desire as a means of attaining a greater knowledge of the universe and the means for ensuring human happiness.