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Dog
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Dogs appear as subjects across a surprisingly wide range of academic disciplines, from animal behavior and veterinary science to law, literature, and marketing. Students encounter the topic in courses on animal studies, creative writing, ethics, and even cognitive science, where questions about animal minds and sensory experience make dogs a compelling case study. Because dogs occupy a unique position as both companions and legal property, they generate genuine intellectual tension between emotional attachment and systematic analysis.

The papers written on this topic reflect that breadth. Some take a legal and policy angle, examining liability and owner responsibility in bite cases. Others focus on literary analysis, particularly of works like The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time and The Call of the Wild, where dogs function as symbols or narrative anchors. Philosophical approaches also appear, exploring what it means to have an animal's sensory experience and inner life. Still other papers address practical dimensions such as non-surgical sterilization, pet care industries, and responsible ownership.

A strong essay on this topic begins with a precise thesis that commits to one angle — legal, literary, ethical, or scientific — rather than treating dogs in a general or sentimental way. Evidence carries the most weight when it is specific: a statute, a textual passage, a documented behavioral study, or a concrete case. The most common pitfall is letting personal affection for animals substitute for argument. Acknowledging the emotional dimensions of human-dog relationships is fine, but the analysis must move beyond feeling and engage the particular framework the discipline demands.

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Paper High School
Diary of a Madman
The Found and Final Chapters of "Diary of a Madman"
Essay Doctorate
Shinto-Buddhism in Japan Japan\'s Main Religious Tradition
Shinto has been Japan's traditional religious beliefs going back to the beginning of its culture, but in the mid 500's A.D. Buddhism was introduced. While it was quickly adopted by the ruling class, the common people maintained their Shinto beliefs and simply merged the two religions together. Today this has evolved into a system of Shinto-Buddhist religious practice that permeates Japanese culture.
Essay Doctorate
Gustave Courbet, Bonjour Monsieur Courbet 1854. Works
The paper looks at one ancient work of art that was famously known as Gustave Courbet, Bonjour Monsieur Courbet and was done in 1854. It classifies the piece of art into the movement era it was done at, the peculiar characteristics of works of art during that movevement era in art and what attributes it has that mad it peculiar.
Paper Undergraduate
Character With a Mental Illness From the Movie the Wizard of Oz 1939
Dorothy, the heroine of The Wizard of Oz is oftentimes viewed as an innocent victim manipulated by those around her. However, that view ignores the very real role that Dorothy played in bringing about the negative…
Paper Doctorate
Dollarocracy How the Money and Media Election Complex Is Destroying America
This paper is about the book Dollarocracy by J. Nichols and R. McChesney. This book is about the confluence of money, media and politics. The authors describe how democracy is being subverted by the influence of the very wealthy. The book is summarized and reviewed, with some of my own analysis thrown in there as well.
Paper Undergraduate
a language development chart
This is a graphically based learning tool that compares language development between standard English language learners, special needs learners and those in ESL / ELL or who are non-native speakers. The charts focus on phonlogy, morphology syntax and semantics and are deliniated into stages. Sources are academic in nature and based on thematic learning theory.
Essay Doctorate
Developmental Psychologist and Theories
This paper discusses two theories of development - Piaget's theory of cognitive development and Kohlberg's theory of moral development. It presents the four stage of Piaget's theory and the goals that a child must achieve in order to progress to the next stage. For Kohlberg's theory, the six stages, divided in three levels, are discussed.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Nike: 1. The Facts of the Situation
This paper answers a number of questions about ethics. There is a case about Nike, and then there are several prompts to open up classroom discussion about a variety of ethical issues. These are answered, and there is also a news article presented about an ethical issue in the news.
Paper Doctorate
Essay on uploaded file details
This study presents a number of theories on whether babies and young children can or do think. The traditional theory is that of Piaget which says that young children do not have innate knowledge of the world and no sense of object permanence. Brooks agrees that they have no past as frame of reference and live only in the here and now. But new theories not state that babies actually think before they speak and already possess some rudimentary moral code inherent within. Gopnik proposes that babies think more scientifically than do scientists and in a way that nature designs will change the world.
Paper Doctorate
Los Angeles (Compare and Contrast Two Books/Articles)
The topic of the paper primarily revolves around Los Angeles by comparing and contrasting tow chosen books that were written within the Los Angeles setting. The two books that have been chosen for comparison in this essay are ‘What Makes Sammy Run' written by Schulberg and ‘Mildred Pierce' written by Cain.