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Selflessness
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Selflessness is the quality of prioritizing the needs and well-being of others above one's own interests, and it appears as a subject of serious inquiry across many academic disciplines. Students in philosophy courses examine it as a problem in ethics and metaphysics, questioning whether truly selfless action is even possible. Nursing and counseling programs treat it as a foundational professional value, asking how caregivers can sustain altruistic practice without personal harm. Religious studies and leadership courses approach it through frameworks like servant leadership and the moral teachings embedded in traditions such as Buddhism, Hinduism, and Christianity. Literary courses use texts like The Death of Ivan Ilych to probe how characters confront—or fail to embrace—lives lived for others.

The archived papers on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a comparative angle, setting figures like Mother Teresa alongside mythological archetypes such as the goddess Kali, or drawing parallels between Buddhist and Hindu concepts of the self. Others are applied and institutional, examining how selfless values shape ethical organizations, law enforcement codes of conduct, or leadership in occupational therapy and church communities. Narrative and literary analyses explore selflessness through personal storytelling or close reading of short fiction, while civic project reports ground the concept in real community action.

A strong essay on selflessness needs a focused thesis that moves beyond defining the term and instead argues a specific claim—whether selflessness is sustainable, culturally constructed, or practically achievable in a given context. Evidence drawn from philosophical argument, professional ethics codes, religious texts, or literary examples all carry weight when carefully analyzed. The most common pitfall is treating selflessness as universally admirable without acknowledging the tensions it creates, such as burnout in caregiving or the erasure of personal identity.

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Paper Masters
Comparison of Okonkwo and Gilgamesh
According to the Merriam Webster dictionary, a hero is defined as a mythological or legendary figure often of divine descent endowed with great strength or ability. Keeping this definition in mind, Gilgamesh is…
Paper Masters
Crime versus sin: legal and moral distinctions
A criminal justice agency, specifically the police department relies very heavily on its organization to fulfill its duties to society, which is to protect from crime and to serve justice (Kenney & McNamara, 1999).
Paper Undergraduate
Mind and body integration in creating lived experience
Mind and Body The three authors in this project approach three superficially disparate topics from three different approaches. Robert Thurman's "Wisdom" approaches the "self" from the uniquely Buddhist perspective, while Karen Armstrong's "Homo Religiousus" approaches major religions from an historical/world-theological perspective and Oliver Sacks' "The Mind's Eye: What the Blind See" addresses measurable, anecdotal experiences of adaptation by various subjects who have lost their eyesight. Despite their somewhat different approaches, all three authors lend significant supports to the vital coaction of mind and body. The crucial nature of the "self" is explored by each author, with Thurman's Buddhist emphasis on "self-less-ness," Armstrong's stress of self-emptying "kenosis" and Sacks' accent on the intimate interrelatedness of mind, brain, self and experience as seen through the effects of mind on body and body on mind. Secondly, all three authors reflect on the commonality of self-delusion, seen through Thurman's explanation of "I vs. I" and "I vs. Them", Armstrong's exploration of the human tendency to see the relationship with God as primarily a unique personal relationship, and Sacks' observations on the highly subjective nature of "reality" and its measurable effects on mind/body interaction in his blind subjects. Finally, these three authors discuss the ultimate centrality of "universality," Thurman accentuating the liberation of self-less-ness that enables us to develop beyond human limitations, Armstrong's significance of the universality of common religious experience, and Sacks' account of the power of internally and externally universal qualities for mind/body interaction. The differing areas examined by Thurman, Armstrong and Sacks all lead to the conclusion that the vital mind/body interaction is based in the genuine "self," is hampered by the common experience of "self-delusion," and is ultimately ideally universal.
Research Paper Doctorate
Classical literature: history, themes, and cultural influence
Aeneas is said to possess spiritual or godlike qualities that make him fit his role as a hero and destined founder of Rome. Critics see this achievement as proceeding both from his destiny and his own actions.
Paper Masters
Perecles Funeral Oration
Pericles, the most revolutionary figure ever found in the history of Ancient Greece was born of a distinguished family about 494 B.C. probably in the country house of his father in the plain near Athens.
Paper Undergraduate
Researched Argument on the Jungle by Upton Sinclair
This paper examines the style of Upton Sinclair in his infamous work, The Jungle. It looks at specific stylistic devices the author used in order to strengthen his argument and make his point even more clear to the public. Although most of the book is written in direct language, it is filled with metaphors and similes that makes connections between individual incidences and the larger society.
Research Paper Doctorate
Plato\'s Educational Systems and Divisions of Classes
Plato's Educational Systems And Divisions Of Classes In The Republic
Research Paper Doctorate
Role of the Women Is Tennessee William\'s Glass Menagerie
Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams, Laura Wingfield, a grown woman, kneels on the floor playing with glass figurines like a child. She envisions a dismal future for herself that includes total withdrawal from the…
Essay Undergraduate
Role of Democracy in the Middle East
There has recently been a wave of democratic uprisings sweeping across the Middle East. Starting in Tunisia, the call for democratic reforms spread through Egypt, Bahrain, Yemen, Jordan, Syria, Iran and many other…
Research Paper Doctorate
Transference and love in psychoanalytic therapy
¶ … transference and transference love, as it is manifest in the psychoanalytic environment. Different therapists have recommended different methods of dealing with this love, which range from simple, knowing…