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Atheism
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Atheism, broadly defined as the absence or rejection of belief in God or gods, is a central subject in philosophy of religion, theology, and ethics courses. Students engage with it because it sits at the intersection of metaphysics, epistemology, and moral theory, raising fundamental questions about the existence of God, the basis of belief, and how humans find meaning without religious frameworks. The topic gains additional academic weight through its relationship to scientific reasoning, particularly debates around evolution and empirical evidence, and through thinkers like Karl Marx, whose critique of religion frames atheism within social and political theory. Works such as C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity appear frequently as counterpoints, giving students a structured theistic argument to analyze and contest.

Papers on this topic take a range of approaches. Comparative and argumentative essays weigh theism against atheism, assessing which position is more philosophically defensible based on logic and evidence. Response-style papers engage directly with specific texts or philosophical articles, evaluating claims about proof, belief, and the limits of scientific knowledge. Other essays explore atheism through broader frameworks, including existentialism, family values, and worldview analysis, treating it as a lens for examining how individuals and societies construct meaning.

A strong essay on atheism establishes a clear, narrow thesis rather than attempting to resolve the entire God debate in one paper. Evidence drawn from philosophical argument, logical consistency, and acknowledged scholarly positions tends to carry more weight than personal conviction alone. The most common pitfall is conflating atheism with related positions such as agnosticism or anti-religion, so defining terms precisely at the outset is essential for maintaining a focused and credible argument.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
CS Lewis Presents His Personal
Lewis presents his personal views on the origins, evolution, and meaning of the Christian religion in Mere Christianity. His arguments are logical, sound, and refreshing. Because Lewis avoids preaching and in fact urges…
Paper Masters
Secularism One of the Most
This study attempts to explicate the nature of secularization as a political and social movement primarily by outlining how the phenomenon has been mischaracterized in the past. Understanding how both proponents and opponents have misunderstood the connection (or lack thereof) between secularization and modernization allows one to more accurately assess historical movements toward secularization, as in the case of revolutionary France or Iran under the Shah. Furthermore, this clearer conception of secularization, and the problems with the secularization theory, offers important insights into the likely future of religion and secularism as they continue to combat each other over the course of the next century.
Paper Undergraduate
Elizabethan Age Culture Alchin, L.K.
Alchin, L.K. Elizabethan Era. Updated March 20, 2008. April 4, 2009.
Essay Doctorate
Myth of Narcissus Is Often Misunderstood; Many
¶ … myth of Narcissus is often misunderstood; many of the readers of the myth interpret the events as Narcissus gazing down at his own reflection in the water and falling in love with himself.
Paper Undergraduate
Philosophy concepts and foundations
¶ … Philosophy of Descartes and its rational transition through the stages of senses, self (Cogito) and God (Innate Idea). Find two criticisms on Descartes approach to philosophy.
Paper Undergraduate
Fundamental questions in Western philosophy from Plato to Kant
These four dialogues describe the discussion of Socrates during times of trial, imprisonment, and execution of Socrates. Socrates presents his defense in the second dialogue the Apology. Should society charge individuals who challenge impunity or reward them. Socrates however fails to defend himself and receives a death sentence. Crito, Socrates friend tries to persuade him to flee the sentence, but in the course of their discussion, a question about civil foundation and moral law including treatment similar to the present emerges.
Research Paper Doctorate
Theological extremism in America
Terrorism has a long and violent history; this is especially true of religious terrorism. While the conditions under which each extremist group operates are different, there nevertheless exist similarities.
Research Paper Doctorate
Master and Margarita by Bulgakov Mikhail Bulgakov\'s
Mikhail Bulgakov's novel "The Master and Margarita" is one of the brightest pieces of Soviet literature on the hand with such masterpieces as One day of Ivan Denisovich by Alexander Soljenitzin and Quite follows Don by…
Paper Undergraduate
Christianity in Albert Camus' The Stranger
The motif of the crucifix in the courtroom is significant of Camus' brush with Christianity through the novel of the ‘Stranger' as a whole. The examining magistrate waves the crucifix at Meursault symbolizing that all that Meursault stands for, and indirectly, therefore, Camus, militates against the basic axioms of Christianity. And what are these axioms? Christianity believes in life after death – in immortality of the soul and continuance of eternal life. Meursault refuses to hope, claiming that human life is irrational and purposeless and that death is the end-result to all creatures. More so, that existence of soul does not exist ant that it is futile, if not cruel and absurd to hope. Meursault, and through him his creator, Camus, would have been surprised to discover that Christianity's main belief is not immortality of the soul, but rather immortality of the body.
Research Paper Doctorate
Hypocrisy in Molière's Tartuffe
An Analysis of Hypocrisy in Moliere's Tartuffe