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Philosophical
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Philosophy as an academic subject invites students to examine the foundations of knowledge, existence, ethics, and reasoning. It appears across a wide range of courses, from introductory humanities seminars to specialized studies in ethics, political theory, and the history of ideas. What makes it academically compelling is its demand for rigorous argumentation about questions that resist simple answers — how to live, what can be known, and how society should be organized. Works and figures such as Plato's Republic, the poetry of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and frameworks drawn from virtue ethics all surface as reference points, reflecting how philosophical inquiry reaches across literature, science, theology, and political thought.

Student papers on this topic take a notably diverse range of approaches. Some engage in direct textual analysis, examining arguments in works like Plato's Republic or Eugene O'Neill's The Hairy Ape. Others apply philosophical frameworks to contemporary concerns, including environmental ethical issues and critical feminist theory, or explore the intersection of philosophy with psychology through approaches like Gestalt therapy. Comparative essays weighing concepts such as virtue versus knowledge, or utilitarian principles like the needs of the many outweighing the needs of the few, are also common. Religious and worldview-based perspectives frequently appear alongside secular philosophical traditions.

A strong philosophical essay establishes a clear, arguable thesis rather than simply summarizing ideas. Evidence typically comes from close reading of primary texts and logical analysis of competing positions. The most common pitfall is writing at too broad a level — strong essays narrow their focus to a specific claim about reason, existence, or ethical life and defend it with sustained, careful argument.

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Paper Undergraduate
Calcutta's Red Light District and Children Who Live There
First of all, even though the children in this film are living in what seems to be (and probably is) and environment of squalor, with prostitution as the main theme in their little communities, they do play and the do…
Paper Masters
Arguing for Egalitarian Societies
Pope Francis, never one to shy away from controversy, attacked contemporary forms of capitalism as not only exclusionary, but also deadly (Downie). To support his claim, Francis notes that the news media regularly…
Essay Doctorate
Jean Watson's theory of human caring and nursing practice
Jean Watson's Theory of Human Caring or Caring Science involves exercising core practices/principles. "Watson's theory of human caring focuses on holistic care and the authentic relationship between caregivers and…
Essay Doctorate
Carr's What Is History?
Edward Carr's What is History is a philosophical look at what makes historians. It examines the way we think about history and challenges us to re-examine the way we think about ourselves.
Paper Doctorate
Death Penalty and Drug Punishment: Rethinking Justice Policy
Punishment vs. Appropriateness -- an Enlightened View for the Twenty-First Century
Term Paper High School
Economic Theory Deep Thoughts
One of the most fascinating aspects of Chapter 4 is how the Marxists theories provide insights into how tightly economic, geopolitical and societal forces interact to redefine the foundational definition of value in a…
Essay Doctorate
How Important Was Neo-Orthodoxy in the 20th Century?
The term "neo-orthodoxy" refers to a 20th century movement among Protestant theologians -- in the United States and in Europe -- that emerged following the bloody carnage of World War I.
Paper Undergraduate
Avoiding Reverse Discrimination While Making a Difference
Through its reference to affirmative action, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 ushered in a remedy for disadvantage and discrimination that was intended to reach into the hallowed halls of higher education, union halls, and…
Essay Doctorate
The Greek financial crisis and economic impacts
The Greek government has faced an ongoing fiscal crisis for the past several years. Recently, for the third time, its Eurozone partners have been compelled to offer a bailout to the country.
Essay Doctorate
Libertine in French Literature
This paper discusses the notion of the libertine in French literature, specifically applying it to the famous epistolary novel Dangerous Liaisons. It discusses the degree to which the notion of the libertine is a radical or conservative force and whether the French Revolution ultimately condemned or condoned the concept of the rakish libertine.