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Selfishness
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Selfishness, broadly understood as prioritizing one's own interests at the expense of others, appears across a wide range of academic disciplines, including psychology, ethics, literature, sociology, and counseling. Students encounter this topic in courses on abnormal psychology, family and relationship dynamics, military leadership, and moral philosophy. Its academic appeal lies in the tension it creates between self-interest and social obligation — a tension that touches nearly every domain of human behavior. Because selfishness intersects with concepts like motivation, control, and respect, it serves as a productive lens for examining both individual conduct and larger cultural or institutional patterns.

The papers archived here approach selfishness from notably varied angles. Some take a literary direction, analyzing the decline of the American Dream in works like The Great Gatsby or examining symbolism in poetry to trace self-interest as a thematic force. Others engage ethical frameworks directly, comparing moral systems to evaluate when self-motivated behavior crosses into harm. Additional papers apply psychological and counseling perspectives, exploring how selfishness manifests in family conflict, marriage dynamics, or abnormal behavior. Still others tackle social and political dimensions, connecting self-interest to issues of race, justice, and domestic leadership failures.

A strong essay on selfishness requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a general claim that selfishness is simply "bad." Effective evidence typically includes specific behavioral examples, theoretical frameworks from ethics or psychology, or close textual analysis drawn from literary sources. Writers should ground abstract claims in concrete, observable terms. The most common pitfall is conflating selfishness with self-interest broadly — careful definitions early in the essay prevent this confusion and give the argument a sharper, more credible foundation.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Rules to Live Buy
Yes, the human race is quite "species-centric," and we are already paying for it. Our planet has changed greatly over the billions of years it has existed, but it has changed far more rapidly since humans entered the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Democracy in America by Alex
¶ … Democracy in America by Alex de Tocqueville, Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad, and the Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx all reflect the Enlightenment in very different ways. The Enlightenment is a term used to…
Research Paper Doctorate
Team Selection, Leadership, and Motivation in Organizations
Although it is unusual within organizations these days for a team leader to choose who will be the team members that he will include in his team, there are still some instances where a team leader needs to choose his…
Paper Doctorate
Awakening and a Doll\'s House the Plight
The plight of women in the nineteenth century becomes the focus of Kate Chopin's short story, "The Awakening" and Henrik Ibsen's play, "A Doll's House." Moments of self-realization are the predominant themes in these…
Essay Doctorate
Team roles and execution in collaborative projects
There are several important dimensions to the project team selection and project completion process. One major dimension and considering that should be involved is the Meyers Briggs framework. Other dimensions are made clear by the great minds at PMI, Maslow, MacGregor and the creators of modern Expectancy Theory. All of these perspectives can and should be used.
Paper Undergraduate
Ethical Egoism in the Criminal
Ethical egoism proposes that every person necessarily, naturally and morally acts out of self-interest. Thus, it is the very basis of all morality to do so. But most thinkers reject this theory because it conflicts with the tenets of an organized society. Gun ownership by law enforcers and select individuals is based on this theory. Everyone has the fundamental right to self-protection by often heavily armed attackers in this very perilous world and in these perilous times.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Lifeline Management Principles and Theories Stark (2004)
This essay is a four part submission in which management styles and principles are evaluated. The first section summarizes the literature on this subject and dissects and analyzes 8 separate readings. The next sections of the essay are applications to the readings to the inner workings of the place of employment within a social worker case management organization.
Paper Doctorate
Gilman Was a Social Activist and Herself
Charlotte Gilman's the Yellow Wallpaper is a haunting semi-autobiographical article of mental dementia where a woman is imprisoned in a room by her male guardians – her doctor, her brother, and her husband – allegedly for the sake of her health. Forced to stare for hours on end at wallpaper in her room, the woman sinks into mental psychosis. The story comes alive particularly because Gillman herself experienced mental dementia. She lived during that period, suffered from contemporary medical advice that proffered to ‘cure' the problem, and angered at chauvinist anti-female bias that reduced women to male ownership capturing and killing them, poured all in her story. Women, Gilman seems to tell us, can free herself. But it takes immense will and effort to do so since socialization and convention has been so strong. It needs the combined effort of womanhood in general to help females free. And once free, women can crawl around the room as she pleases. "I've got out at last," says the character, "in spite of you and Jane. And I've pulled off most of the paper, so you can't put me back!" Gilman's experience brings the "Yellow Wallpaper" to live and her social activism is the stimulus behind the story telling's – women all over the world – to fight for their freedom.
Paper Undergraduate
Sun Tzu\'s Art of War Is a Part of China\'s Tradition of Scholarship and Documentation
Sun Tzu and his famous book The Art of War cannot be understood apart from the Chinese cultural and historical context that produced them, although his concepts were widely borrowed and imitated over the past 2,000 years. He was a contemporary of Confucius, after all, and his assumptions about warfare were harmonized within that philosophical tradition. Warfare was an evil, a waste and cause of disharmony and disorder, especially when it was prolonged. It was a waste of lives as well as the resources of the state, and should therefore be avoided through deterrence and clever diplomacy, and only then be used as a last resort. The most brilliant commander was the one who was able to defeat the enemy without fighting battles, although if these had to be fought then they should be won quickly and decisively.
Paper Doctorate
Material Culture Commodities Are Inherently Morally Bad
This paper analyses the proposition that commodities are inherently morally bad. It strives to shed light on material culture and how it negatively affects the society. The paper investigates the origins of this proposition, and the ideas that such a proposition is based upon. In addition, the paper outlines opposing points of view on this debate.