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Earth
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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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Sandel, Locke, and Rawls on Justice and the Common Good
In "A Politics of the Common Good," Michael Sandel defends the idea of reintroducing the concept of "virtue" into American political debates (261-269). Sandel contends that our political discourse has become…
Paper Doctorate
Benson and Newell: cognitive science and human problem solving
Which of Benson's arguments was most convincing? Why? Benson's 4th argument ("Interdisciplinary courses are shallow") has some merit albeit he cheapens it by dipping too deeply into his love of exaggeration.
Paper Masters
Environment Ethics the Main Idea
The main idea conveyed in Deborah Bird Rose's essay, "So the Future can Come Forth from the Ground" is that humans have a responsibility to take care of the world. This is not an abstract concept.
Essay Doctorate
The other six days: vocation, work, and ministry from a biblical perspective
The book by R. Paul Stevens (The Other Six Days: Vocation, Work, and Ministry in Biblical Perspective) is a fascinating read because the author basically attacks the high and mighty place in religion that theology has assumed. He explains through many interesting narratives that every person, no matter what vocation they may be in, has a calling. And theology is not just for ministers and missionaries but it is also for every individual at all levels of society.
Research Paper Doctorate
Movie/Tv the Original Star Trek Series Contains
The original Star Trek series contains a surprising amount of social commentary. The multiracial, multiethnic makeup of Starfleet itself is testimony to Gene Roddenberry's optimistic conception of the future of race (or…
Research Paper Doctorate
Evolution vs. Creationism Biological Evolution or Evolutionary
Biological evolution or evolutionary biology is genetic change in a population occurring from generation to another (O'Neill 2002). All life forms evolve and continue evolving from earlier species, and these life forms…
Research Paper Doctorate
Food Supply the Book Food First: Beyond
The book Food First: Beyond the Myth of Scarcity makes a clear argument against the existence of "a world hunger crisis." Lappe and Collins support their main thesis that rather than a "global food shortage," we are…
Research Paper Doctorate
Christology: theology and historical perspectives
¶ … Christ Was and How it Relates to His Work
Research Paper Doctorate
Poetry: forms, history, and literary analysis
The apparition of these faces in the crowd;
Paper Doctorate
Contemporary history: major events and interpretations
The influential factor in the evolution of the international world of politics following the end of World War II was the interrelationship between the United States and the Soviet Union. The conflictive positions between the two states influenced both the evolution of highly dominant states as well as minor governments.