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Earth
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What is Earth?

Earth as an academic topic spans a wide range of disciplines, from the natural sciences to the humanities. In science courses, it anchors discussions of planetary systems, atmospheric processes, oceanography, and global change, making it one of the most foundational subjects students encounter. Its academic interest lies in the tension between Earth as a physical system — with its surface, water, and atmosphere operating in dynamic balance — and Earth as a stage for human civilization, meaning-making, and environmental consequence. That dual identity invites inquiry from geology, environmental science, literature, religious studies, and beyond.

The papers archived under this topic reflect genuinely diverse approaches. Some take a scientific angle, examining unresolved questions in global change or exploring the role of optical instruments in advancing understanding of the natural world. Others engage environmental policy, such as how information and communication technologies affect environmental outcomes. Literary and cultural analyses appear as well, including readings of poetry that treats the earth as a living, symbolic presence. Still others approach the topic through theology, mythology, or identity, using earth as a grounding concept rather than a direct subject, with nuclear energy and oceanography representing more focused technical treatments.

A strong essay on Earth benefits from a clearly bounded thesis — covering the entire planet across all disciplines produces sprawl, so the best papers commit to one lens, whether scientific, cultural, or policy-oriented. Evidence drawn from empirical data, close reading, or documented case studies carries the most weight depending on the approach. The most common pitfall is treating Earth as a backdrop rather than an active subject; the strongest work engages directly with how Earth's systems or symbolic weight shapes the specific argument being made.

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Paper Masters
Foreign Idea of a Cosmic Kingship Religion
Religion is one of the constants that exist for all the peoples of the world. When the as yet primitive tribes in South America and remote Pacific islands in the twentieth century, they had firmly ensconced religious…
Paper Doctorate
Three Pronged Symbolic System of the Totem Pole Potlatch and Tamawanas Dance
This essay has to do with how the Native American people of the Pacific Northwest conducted sacred ceremonies and what they meant to the people. Potlatch is a festival much like Christmas, but the gifts exchanged are meant as a redistribution of wealth. The totem poles are specific to people and tribes, and the Tamanawa is a sacred dance. All of these work together to form the sacred potlatch which was banned during the 1880's but returned in the 1950's.
Paper Undergraduate
I Ching Classical Understand vs. Aleister Crowley
Any belief, whether it is a self made system or is bestowed upon us from above, can be taken as a religious view, for how does one define religion except as a system which sets upon humans a certain lifestyle to follow. The definition might seem vague at the least, but to define religion is becoming increasingly difficult , as more and more new sources of religious believes emerge. In all sense of the world, there is a message, however it may or may not be from an omnipotent, invisible God; it can be from a messiah or a man who has been raised to the level of a Messiah by his/her followers, as is the case of Buddha. The same has been the fate of many of the philosophers who have presented a framework for how to live one's life. One such philosophical work that will be discussed in this paper is the philosophy of I-Ching or Yi Jing. Although the text is rooted in antiquity, there have been an impact on it through the various interpretations had been presented.
Paper Doctorate
Godzilla (1954) Was the Original Science Fiction
Godzilla (1954) was the original science fiction class that inspired a large number of sequels over the next twenty years, and as usual with this genre reflected contemporary Cold War fears and anxieties about nuclear…
Paper Masters
Research paper concepts and applications
Sculptures and paintings depicting American Indians in the 19th Century followed certain predictable themes and patterns, particularly the idea of the destruction and disappearance of a supposedly inferior race by the Western march of white civilization. Two sculptures that once decorated the Capitol, Horatio Greenough's The Rescue and Luigi Persico's Discovery of America, both commissioned by the government in 1836, were so explicitly racist that Congress finally removed them in 1958 after years of protests by Native Americans.
Paper Undergraduate
Philosophical perspectives on the meaning of life
Distressed and hopeless people do not consider or think about the meaning of life. For them, the meaning of life becomes inappropriate when their existence is at stake and when their life is a mixture of worries and perplexities. On the other hand, people who are not desperate mull over the meaning of life. It becomes a problem for such people to reflect on the meaning of life who count on endurance, relief, safety measures, and pleasure. For desperate people, life is to be lived one moment at a time. However, those who consider the meaning of life as important consider it every day and very well know that they should step back from the moment to see and observe life in a long-range context (Baumeister 3).
Essay Doctorate
Country Development: Economic, Social, Political, and Moral
What is meant by 'development?' This paper attempts to answer this question by examining how the status of least-developed, developing, and developed nations has affected the cultural perception of what constitutes development. It also traces the definition of the term from the early days of colonialism to the contemporary era and suggests changes in how we view development.
Research Paper High School
Final Paper
Literature – Comparison of Short Stories and Poems This paper focuses on the similarities and differences of the representation of death and the impermanence in the short story "A Father's Story" by Andre Dubus, and the poem "Because I could not stop for Death" by Emily Dickinson. "A Father's Story" and "Because I could not stop for Death" are two very different approaches to the subjects of Death and impermanence. First, their forms are quite different. "A Father's Story" is a short story and is true to that form: it is brief, it uses few characters, it strives to prove a main point, and it uses concise, pointed writing to move the story along quickly and to portray characters by the way they speak. "Because I could not stop for Death" is a poem, written in balanced, lined verse with specific words used to arouse an imaginative or emotional response from the reader. Secondly, the two works approach the subject matter differently in several aspects. "A Father's Story" has a moral point of view about the father's abandonment of his principles to save his daughter. In this way, the short story acts as a parable and reflects Dubus' own Catholic beliefs. "Because I could not stop for Death" has no particular moral and makes no mention of God or religion; however, it speaks of "eternity" and gives Death human characteristics and is laden with sadness and hopelessness. In this way, it reflects Dickinson's own isolation and loneliness. Comparing these two works shows how very different writing forms can be in style and substance, even though they discuss the same topics. ?
Essay Doctorate
Global Warming and Climate Change
Global warming refers to the warming of the earth's temperature, in particular oceans and the layer of the atmosphere closest to the planet (Thompson, Lonnie & Gioietta 114). Thus far, the total temperature increase is…
Paper Undergraduate
Logical fallacies and their applications in reasoning
¶ … speaker makes an appeal to emotion fallacy (because 'everyone' supports the idea, it must be right) while the second makes an irrelevant conclusion (caring about animals and homeless people are not mutually…