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Buddhism
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Buddhism is one of the world's major religious and philosophical traditions, originating with the teachings of the Buddha and centered on concepts such as suffering, impermanence, and the nature of existence. Students engage with this topic across religious studies, philosophy, history, and cultural studies courses. Its academic interest lies in both its internal complexity — including the distinction between Theravada and Mahayana traditions — and its relationships with other belief systems such as Hinduism and Jainism. Buddhism also attracts interdisciplinary attention, connecting religious thought to fields like neuroscience, where questions about neuroplasticity intersect with meditative practice, and to the arts, as seen in works like the Cleveland Green Tara painting from 13th-century Central Tibet.

Student papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Comparative essays are especially common, examining shared characteristics between Buddhism and Hinduism, or contrasting Buddhist concepts like dukkha with Christian notions of sin. Some papers focus on specific traditions, analyzing Theravada and Mahayana branches side by side. Others take a cultural or sociological angle, exploring how Buddhism is practiced in the United States or how its ideas appear in films such as Rashomon, I Heart Huckabees, Little Buddha, and Wheel of Time. Historical and art-historical approaches also appear, grounding Buddhist thought in material and visual culture.

A strong essay on Buddhism begins with a clearly scoped thesis — choosing one tradition, concept, or comparison rather than attempting to survey the entire religion. Evidence drawn from core teachings about suffering and existence tends to carry more weight than broad generalizations. The most common pitfall is treating Buddhism as a monolithic system, so acknowledging meaningful differences across regional and doctrinal traditions strengthens any argument significantly.

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Paper Doctorate
Prisoner Rights the Purpose of This Study
The purpose of this study is to explore the issue of prisoner's rights. The topic of prisoner's rights has been subject to a lot of attention due to the recent controversies which are discussed in the study. Prisoners are often treated unfairly in the United States of America despite the constitution specifically providing forbids that in the Eighth Amendment. There are a various means of unfair treatment which the prisoners are exposed to. The prisoners have been facing various problems and are exposed to poor living environment. They have been treated harshly by the prison guards and the conditions of the prisons are extremely poor. Prisons are overcrowded which adds to the poor living conditions that the prisoners have to cope up with. Many of the critics of the prisoners' rights demand that they should be given only the basic rights. However they should work in order to cover their own costs. In this manner they won't be a burden to the taxpayer while they are being punished. The prisoners should be paying the debt to the society as they had broken a law and hence have been in jail. It is the essential part of being punished that they have to give up some of their rights.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Cyrus the Great of Persia and Emperor Ashoka of India
The history of a nation is measured chronologically by its rulers. An era of history can be discussed while comparing the government and sociology of one nation to that of another existing in the same time period.
Paper Masters
Carl Yung Personality Iceberg Theory
Carl Jung grew up during the late nineteenth century in Switzerland in a Protestant Victorian culture. It was this culture that had such an impact on the values held by American individuals during that timeframe.
Paper Undergraduate
Global Business Cultural Analysis: Singapore's Economy
The objective of this study is to answer the questions how the major elements and dimension of culture including religion, ethics, values, attitudes, manners, customs, social structures, and organizations integrated in Singapore by local conducting business. As well, this work will answer how these elements and dimensions compare with United States culture and business. Finally, this work will examine the implications for United States businesses that wish to conduct business in Singapore.
Paper Undergraduate
Tamil Tiger of Sri Lanka
The Tamil Tigers of Sri Lanka are undoubtedly one of the most organized, effective and brutal terrorist groups in the world.
Research Paper Doctorate
Elements of Religious Traditions
Myth is a story of origin that seeks to explain the existence of humankind, event, practice, belief or phenomena in the society. The facts behind myths are not verifiable meaning myths may be real or not real. Every culture has its myths held in high esteem. Different cultures across the world have different myths explaining the same phenomena as they have different interpretations of the same happenings. The different explanations form their basis from the environment and other surrounding factors.
Research Paper Doctorate
The nurse's role in end-of-life care in nursing homes
¶ … Role as a Nurse/Life Helper in a Long-Term Care Facility
Research Paper Doctorate
Compare and Contrast How Suicide Is Viewed Both in Buddhism and Christianity
Buddhist and Christina Ethic on Suicide and Euthanasia
Research Paper Doctorate
World mythology: comparative traditions and cultural narratives
¶ … Mythology Through the Eyes of Joseph Campbell
Paper Masters
Nature of religious experience
William James saw the human psyche as being awesomely complex. To start off with, he divided it into two selves: • The phenomenal self (the experienced self, the 'me' self, the self as known) • The self-thought (the I-self, the self as knower). There is the ‘ME' which is the objective, detached term that we use – that we see – the empirical self. And then there is the ‘I' the constant flow of subjective thought that the person has about the self and which makes the person perceive the self, moment per moment, in a certain way: 'Personality implies the incessant presence of two elements, an objective person, known by a passing subjective Thought and recognized as continuing in time. Hereafter let us use the words ME and I for the empirical person and the judging Thought.' (James (1890), op. cit., Vol. 1, p. 371.)