Essay Topic Hub

Cults
Essays

117+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

117 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

The study of cults sits at the intersection of religious studies, sociology, and history, making it a subject addressed in courses ranging from world religions and anthropology to social psychology and cultural studies. The term itself carries significant academic tension — as several student papers on this topic note, scholars of religion tend to avoid the word "cult" because of its pejorative connotations in popular usage. Academically, the concept encompasses a broad range of religious groups, ancient ritual practices, and modern movements, raising questions about power, meaning, authority, and the boundaries between mainstream religion and alternative belief systems.

Student papers on this topic approach the subject from several distinct angles. Some treat cults in their classical sense, examining ritual worship of gods in ancient Greece, Rome, or other early civilizations. Others focus on modern religious groups, their social structures, and their relationship to established institutions like the church. Comparative approaches are common, placing cults alongside recognized world religions such as Christianity, Islam, and Hinduism to analyze how institutional legitimacy is constructed. Regionally specific case studies, such as the relationship between cults and Los Angeles, also appear, grounding abstract religious concepts in concrete social and economic contexts.

A strong essay on this topic requires a clearly defined scope — whether the focus is ancient ritual practice, modern movements, or the sociology of religious groups more broadly. Evidence drawn from historical sources, theological frameworks, or sociological analysis of group behavior and power dynamics tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is relying on sensationalized portrayals rather than engaging seriously with how scholars define and distinguish religious groups from mainstream institutions.

Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
Religious Values in War and Peace
This paper discusses the religion Hinduism and how its people behave in both peaceful and violent situations. Although Hindu are considered a predominantly peaceful people, they have a rigid caste system which encourages violence. History has shown that Hindu persons were capable of warfare, such as in India and also of governing peacefully.
Paper Doctorate
Examining object with specific information for greater understanding
This paper discusses a statuette in bronze which is featured at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The goddess Cybele was taken up by the Romans following the invasion by Hannibal. They prayed and their prophets pledged that if they worshiped this ancient goddess that they would be able to defeat their enemies. This statue shows Cybele on a chariot lead by two lions.
Research Paper Doctorate
Idolatry: How Some Object or Text Discovered
Idolatry in the ancient Near East -- a non-Exodus Perspective
Paper Masters
William James\' Idea of Man\'s Religious Experience
William James' idea of man's religious experience is that man feels God or a spiritual presence in him and that this intuition alone - real as it feels – is the basis of evidence that a mystical something exists. Congruent to the utilitarianism of James' philosophy, he asserts the cash-value of such belief in that it helps the individual attain a more meaningful life and gives him certain direction and bliss. In this way, interaction with the Divine (or mystical feelings) whether ‘real or not that such presence exists – and it doesn't matter - are important and authentic since they contain instrumental value. Scientists of the time perceived people who had religious ‘experiences' as being, at best, in delirium; at worst, as delusional and insane. James argued that these instances were metaphysical, namely above and beyond physical experience, and could, consequently, not be measured by scientific criteria.
Research Paper Doctorate
Scientology as a modern religious movement
Scientology: Its Origins and Its Implications for Society
Research Paper Doctorate
History concepts and perspectives
There is an old saying that familiarity breeds contempt. But does unfamiliarity breed similarity? In the Middle Ages, two civilizations at opposite ends of the globe evolved in a strangely similar manner.
Research Paper Doctorate
Titus Lucretius Carus in Materialism and Epicureanism
Titus Lucretius Carus, or Titus, is a Roman poet who became renowned with his work entitled, "De Rerum Natura" (On the Nature of Things/Universe). One of the philosophies that are apparent in this famous philosophical…
Research Paper Doctorate
Cults and Los Angeles
Why is Southern California most affected by cults? 6-8
Paper Undergraduate
Cross currents between yoga philosophy and Thelemic texts
¶ … Cross-Currents of philosophy between the Yoga-Sutra of Patanjali, Parama rthasa ra of Abhinavagupta, and Aleister Crowley's Argentum Astrum
Research Paper Doctorate
Religion, cults, and establishments
Of all the creatures on the planet, only mankind seeks to establish the ideas of worship, and engages in practices which look in a direction to identify that which is holy. There are no shrines built by schools of fish.