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Common Sense
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Common sense occupies an unusual space in academic writing because it operates as both a philosophical concept and a historical artifact. In composition and rhetoric courses, students examine what common sense means as a form of everyday reasoning — intuitive, logical thinking that guides ordinary decisions. In American history and literature courses, the topic shifts toward Thomas Paine's landmark pamphlet, which argued for American independence and used accessible language to mobilize popular support. The dual nature of the subject makes it relevant across disciplines, from political philosophy and psychology to education and sociology, each treating common sense as something worth questioning rather than simply accepting.

The papers collected here reflect that range of approaches. Some offer rhetorical analysis of Paine's writing, examining how he built arguments for independence and shaped American political identity. Others take a definitional angle, working through what common sense actually means as a mode of thinking. Additional papers apply the concept to contemporary scenarios — workplace behavior, law enforcement hiring, school policy, and responses to events like terrorism or natural disasters — treating common sense as a practical standard against which real decisions can be measured. A smaller group explores regional identity and educational philosophy, using common sense as a lens for broader social questions.

A strong essay on this topic begins by establishing which version of common sense it addresses: the philosophical concept, the historical pamphlet, or a practical standard in a specific context. Evidence carries more weight when it is specific — close reading of Paine's text, concrete case examples, or grounded reasoning about human behavior. The most common pitfall is treating common sense as self-evident, which circular reasoning undermines rather than supports a thesis.

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Paper Undergraduate
Outfoxed Before Watching the Documentary
Before watching the documentary about Fox News entitled "Outfoxed," I considered myself immune to the effects of the Fox network. I assumed that if I did not watch Fox News and did not rely upon it as a source of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Durkheim\'s Anomic and Egoistic Suicide
One hundred and nine years ago, the first edition of Le Suicide, Emile Durkheim's reportedly "flawed masterpiece" (Pickering and Walford 182) on suicide was published in 1897.
Research Paper Doctorate
Excessive Force an Officer Shoves
An officer shoves a suspect against a brick wall, handcuffing her. The officer beside him also shoves a suspect against the brick wall, only this one smashes the suspect's head hard, breaking his nose and dislocating…
Paper High School
Death Penalty -- it Doesn\'t
Death Penalty -- it Doesn't Really Deter Crime
Paper Masters
Mark Twain Adventures of Huckleberry
Mark Twain's novel "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" puts across a series of concepts that relate to human nature and the contrast between a natural life and a civilized one. In spite of the fact that society has experienced much progress, people who lived during the recent centuries have performed a great deal of immoralities. Twain basically uses the character of Huck with the purpose of emphasizing the fact that society and civilized people in particular are inclined to be hypocritical. The majority of people prefers to put across a false moral attitude and is actually interested in material values and in achieving their personal goals, regardless of the effects that its actions have on others.
Paper Undergraduate
Adult Education the Ideal Application
The ideal application of Responsible Practice:
Paper Undergraduate
Business and creativity: a literature review
In this paper, we are discussing what mindset individuals must have to be successful in business. As this is playing an increasingly important part, in helping to determine how successful a firm will be in the future. Once this is completed, we provide a sample survey that can be used to see the extent of how these ideas are being embraced by executives around the world.
Paper Undergraduate
Machiavellis The Prince
According the Machiavelli, what qualities are the most important for an effective leader to possess? Why?
Paper Undergraduate
North-South issues and development assistance
Consider a textbook Heckscher-Ohlin model, with two countries (North and South), two factors (skilled and unskilled labour), and two goods (skill-intensive and labour-intensive manufactures). The North is more abundantly endowed with skilled labour: it has a larger (inelastic) supply of skilled, relative to unskilled, workers than the South. Both sorts of workers are mobile between sectors within each country, but internationally immobile. The North thus has a comparative advantage in the production of the skill-intensive good, which needs a higher ratio of skilled to unskilled workers than the labour-intensive good. And vice versa for the South.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Douglass and abolitionist literature: transatlantic slave trade and slave narratives
The story of Africans and the Americas is a violent and painful one. Africans were used as a race of slaves by white colonists in America, and in regions across the world for centuries.