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Determinism
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Determinism is the philosophical position that every event, including every human thought and action, is the inevitable result of prior causes operating according to natural laws. Students encounter this topic most often in philosophy, ethics, psychology, and humanities courses, where it raises fundamental questions about moral responsibility, personal identity, and the nature of human agency. The topic is academically compelling because it sits at the intersection of metaphysics, science, and everyday life — challenging assumptions about what it means to make a genuine choice. Thinkers such as Plato, Socrates, Sartre, Richard Taylor, William Stace, and Ted Honderich appear across student work, reflecting the long and contested history of these debates.

Papers on this topic tend to cluster around a few core approaches. Many take a comparative structure, setting determinism against free will, libertarianism, or compatibilism and weighing the strengths of each position. Others examine specific dimensions of the problem, such as environmental determinism, fate and society, or the relationship between individual actions and larger natural or cultural forces. Literary analysis also appears, with works like Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet used to explore how fate and agency operate within narrative. Some essays are more personal and reflective, connecting philosophical positions to questions of self-creation and cultural change.

A strong essay on determinism begins with a clearly scoped thesis — arguing for or against a specific position rather than simply summarizing all sides. Evidence drawn from philosophical argument, logical consistency, and close reading of primary texts carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating determinism with fatalism; treating them as identical undermines analytical precision and weakens any argument that depends on the distinction.

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Obsessive compulsive disorder: symptoms, causes, and treatment
¶ … dysfunctional behavior that strikes 1 out of 40 or 50 adults and 1 out of 100 children or 2-3% of any population. It can begin at any age, although most commonly in adolescence or early adulthood - from ages 6 to 15…
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Philosophical perspectives and major thinkers
Underlying assumptions about human nature impact most forms of creative expression, including films, television shows, and literature. In fact, some of the most poignant commentaries on human nature can be found in…
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¶ … Supreme Court's recent decision to ban the execution of mentally challenged individuals raises important ethical issues. Judges must be able to determine if a person is indeed mentally challenged.
Essay Masters
Is Walden an Eden? Thoreau's Quest for Simple Living
Thoreau's appeal to adolescence and the remnants of it that are sustained in young adulthood is inarguable. The revolutionaries of the 1960s would find in Thoreau's writings the clarity of vision and thought to recognize structural violence—though they would not yet know well that term. Thoreau repeatedly observed the manner in which private property can enslave people and pit them against one another. For those who seek a personal peace, Thoreau cautioned against accepting the media's version of the news and the truth as a substitution for the solidity of private reality. "Shams and delusions are esteemed for soundest truths, while reality is fabulous…Let us settle ourselves, and work and wedge our feet downward through the mud and slush of opinion, and prejudice, and tradition, and delusion, and appearance... till we come to a hard bottom and rocks in place, which we can call reality..." Those who desire to come to the hard bottom and work with reality are often seen to choose a simplified lifestyle. Those who give themselves over to religious lives of service—of those extraordinary individuals like Dr. Paul Farmer—readily testify that they achieve a measure of peace that a life in pursuit of material wealth could not match.
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James A. Michener: life and literary career
Open a book and you enter into another world. The names, the places, and even the events, may be familiar, yet they are not. They don't exist. They are the very personal creations of the mind of another - the mind of…
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Reason Mind Body the Philosophers
The philosophers of ancient Greece were the first western thinkers to develop the notion of reason, and specifically, to investigate how far reason can take human beings in their search for understanding of the world…
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Real Lincoln by Thomas Dilorenzo,
More than 140 years after his assassination, Abraham Lincoln remains a sainted figure in American history. Majority of the books about the Great Emancipator are practically hagiographies.
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Defend One of the 3 Determinism Libertarianism or Compatibilism
Philosophical views on free will are discussed, with specific reference to how the idea of God may be involved. Views are divided into determinism, libertarianism, and compatibilism, with the last of these being endorsed. Determinists examine free will—the human capacity to choose a course of action from different ethically-weighted possibilities—and decide that every cause has a prior cause, and thus free will is a myth. Libertarians examine free will, and decide that determinism is a myth. Meanwhile compatibilists examine determinism and libertarianism and find some middle route whereby the two possibilities can be made consistent with each other. The paper concludes that the free will debate itself could be effortlessly recast as a debate about theology, in which few of the participants seem aware of the fact that they are engaged in theological debate.
Research Paper Doctorate
Absolute determinism: philosophical foundations and implications
Questions about place and role of reason puzzle generations of philosophers as they are among the fundamental questions of philosophy. In case it appears that everything is planned and all events are mutually connected…
Paper Masters
Allies Won the Opening Line of Historian
Book review, four pages in length, on Overy, Richard. Why the Allies Won. W.W. Norton & Co., 1997. The book is about why the allies won world war two and reframes the war. The essay has a clear thesis statement but also offers some personal opinion at the end. The thesis is that Richard Overy believes that it was moral cohesion that helped the allies win. The author also believes the the eastern front was the most important.