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Ancient
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The ancient world spans a vast range of civilizations, practices, and ideas that historians, classicists, and religious studies scholars examine to understand how human societies first took organized shape. Courses in world history, art history, religious studies, and political science all draw on ancient sources, asking students to investigate how early cultures established governance, belief systems, trade, medicine, and artistic expression. What makes this period academically compelling is the tension between how remote these societies feel and how directly their structures, philosophies, and conflicts continue to shape contemporary life.

Papers on this topic approach the ancient world from several angles. Some focus on specific civilizations or regions, such as Classical and Hellenistic Greece, the Etruscan world, or the Ancient Near East, often through comparative or art-historical analysis. Others trace particular practices — fermentation, fasting, traditional medicine, or musical instruments like the panpipes — across cultural contexts. Religious experience, including Jewish diaspora, Christian ritual, and Roman Catholicism, also features prominently, as does the long reach of ancient literary traditions visible in works like Gilgamesh. Some essays take a broader theoretical stance, asking whether modern understandings of nature or power align more closely with ancient frameworks than with later periods such as the Renaissance.

A strong essay on the ancient world needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey. Evidence drawn from primary sources, archaeological records, or well-established historical frameworks carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating "ancient" as a monolithic category — successful essays specify a civilization, time period, or practice and resist collapsing distinct cultures into a single narrative.

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Thesis Doctorate
The Baptism Debate
This paper provides a review of the relevant peer-reviewed and scholarly literature concerning different views about the purpose and merits of baptism, and whether baptism is reserved for believers only or for infants as well. In addition, a discussion concerning what mode of baptism is biblical is followed by a summary of the research and important findings in the conclusion.
Paper Undergraduate
Introduction to the New Testament
This paper analyzes the continuity of themes of Passover, desert, law and death in the Old and New Testaments. Christ's sacrifice on the cross continues the theme of the Passover (and begins on the feast of the Passover). It is prepared for by fasting in the desert (just as Moses leads his people through the desert) where they receive a new lasw.
Paper Undergraduate
Building Projects Six Building Projects
Palatine Chapel in Aachen (AD 792 -- 805)
Research Paper Undergraduate
Judaism and the Afterlife Jewish
The belief in an afterlife is an almost universal concept, with most major religions around the world providing dogmatic support. Although the fine points vary from religion to religion, the concept of an afterlife is…
Paper Undergraduate
Bres -- Celtic Fertility God
Much like other cultures in Western civilization, that of the ancient Celts who lived primarily in what is now Northern England, Wales, Ireland and Scotland, worshipped an entire range of gods and goddesses, known as a…
Essay Doctorate
John Woo\'s Face/Off John Woo\'s 1997 Face/Off
John Woo's 1997 Face/Off was only the Hong Kong filmmaker's third American feature, preceded by Hard Target (1993) starring Jean-Claude van Damme and Broken Arrow (1996) starring Christian Slater and John Travolta.
Paper Doctorate
Ancient China: history, culture, and society
The Ancient Chinese were quite adept at scientific and technological innovations -- long before many were available in Europe. Some of these inventions include: iron casting, the compass, gunpowder, geological mining…
Research Paper Doctorate
Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery": Symbolism and Social Critique
Speaking to the San Francisco Chronicle in 1948 regarding her controversial short story "The Lottery," Shirley Jackson stated, "Explaining just what I had hoped the story to say is very difficult.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Music and dance as complementary performance arts
In 1968, a new form of music, blended from a religious movement, Rastafarian, and numerous musical influences such as rhythm and blues, rocksteady, African, and ska, emerged in Jamaica and spread quickly throughout the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Euthanasia: The Ethical and Legal Case for the Right to Die
The debate about Euthanasia (Greek for "happy death") is an ancient one but it has acquired a new relevance in recent times as advances in medical science have greatly extended human life-spans and it is now possible to…