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Empiricism
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Empiricism is a foundational theory of knowledge holding that understanding of the world derives primarily from sensory experience rather than innate ideas or pure reason. It appears across philosophy, cognitive psychology, and the history of science courses, where students examine how human minds acquire, verify, and organize knowledge. The theory sits at the center of longstanding debates about the nature of reality, the reliability of the senses, and what it means for a belief to be true. Works by figures such as Locke and Berkeley, who appear directly in the archived papers, give students concrete philosophical positions to engage with, making empiricism an especially productive topic for developing close argumentative analysis.

Papers on this topic approach empiricism from several distinct angles. Comparative essays set empiricism against rationalism, weighing sensory evidence against the claims of reason, while historical surveys trace how the theory shaped fields like cognitive psychology. Some papers perform close philosophical analysis, examining specific arguments such as Clifford's epistemological claims alongside Descartes' method of doubt, or contrasting a rationalist thinker like Descartes with an empiricist framework drawn from figures like Dubois. The mind-body problem also surfaces as a connected theme, showing how theories of knowledge intersect with questions about consciousness and mental life.

A strong essay on empiricism needs a focused thesis that commits to a clear position — whether defending, critiquing, or qualifying the empiricist account of knowledge. Evidence drawn from specific philosophical arguments and their logical structure carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating empiricism and rationalism as simple opposites; strong essays acknowledge where the two traditions overlap or respond to each other's limitations rather than reducing the debate to a binary contrast.

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Thesis Undergraduate
Ancient Greek beliefs about the afterlife
The question as to what happens after death is not fathomable within human reason. As such, it remains one of the biggest mysteries of life. The belief in life after death is what keeps the hopes of the human race intact even in the face of the tragedy of death. The concept ‘afterlife' appears absurd in light of rational thought yet strangely familiar. Since time immemorial, numerous theories and beliefs have emerged in bid to work out this disarray. As for Christians, there is a mainstream belief that revolves around Heaven and Hell for rewarding righteousness and punishing evil respectively. In Hinduism, the belief is that upon death, the human soul deserts the body and reincarnates in a different form based on ‘actions and consequences.' In Ancient Greek religion, there was a wide range of beliefs. As it appertains to this study, Ancient Greeks believed in life after death where the soul departed the body and moved into the Underworld. One of these beliefs was in life after death in an alternate universe where souls went for the afterlife. They held on to the faith that death merely marked the end of human life or human and not the existence of the soul. While the Ancient Greeks believed in the existence of the soul after death, they saw the afterlife as one that lacked purpose; according to them, life after death was meaningless.
Essay Doctorate
Nurture Wins Nature/Nurture the Debate of Nature
Nurture refers to personal experience, context, and environment (physical and social) with respect to what has a greater influence over a person's character as well as the general outcome of his/her life. It is a debate that has engaged those in the social sciences, such as sociologists, anthropologists, and psychologists, as well as debated by political scientists and philosophers. Nurture may also be referred to as behaviorism or empiricism in the context of this debate. It is the position of the paper that though both nature and nurture have affective influence over each individual, nurture is the factor that ultimately wields more power over determining the type of person someone will be as well as the overall course of that person's life.
Essay Doctorate
Organizational structure and its critical implications
Introduction As with structure, culture is methodologically analyzable by virtue of its emergent status. Indeed, like structure, culture has relational, causal properties of its own, which confront actualizing agency in the form of situational logics (Archer 2006: ch. 7). Cultural analysis is also a multi-level affair, from the doctrinal level, where, for instance, religious doctrine may contradict welfare policy, down to the micro-level. Just as any role within an organization can have contradictory requirements, so can cultural values. However, the problem currently vitiating the literature on ‘organizational culture' is precisely how one can examine the relative interplay between society's ‘prepositional register' and agency when culture is reduced to, or defined solely in terms of, what goes on at the level of causality. The realist assertion that culture as an emergent product has properties of its own is thrown out of the analytical window; or, following Archer, the S-C level is conflated with the CS level.
Research Paper Doctorate
Philosophy: Empiricism Empiricism: Does it Collapse Into
It is important at first to identify the fact that "empiricism" may refer to a method -- for example, the "empirical method" of observing child behavior, or an "empirical study of cancer in rats" -- and it also may…
Paper Undergraduate
The role of spirituality in depression treatment
The absence of an adequate definition of spirituality is perhaps one reason why researchers have difficulty identifying the role of spirituality in the treatment of depression. What is spirituality?
Paper Doctorate
Hume and Descartes on God, Miracles, and Knowledge
A great many ideologies produced through human history are generally connected to divinity and the idea that God or some other divine force will selectively intervene with human acts and experiences in order to…
Paper Doctorate
Freud Scholarly Research on Freud\'s
Austrian physicist, philosopher and writer Sigmund Freud is highly regarded for his groundbreaking insights and heavily criticized for the flimsiness of his scientific processes. This would create a figure of value both…
Paper Undergraduate
Emanuel Kant's philosophical contributions and legacy
The Work of Kant and His Influence in History and Western Thought
Paper Masters
Religion and or Science
This is an overview of the first half of G. Schroeder;s THE HIDDEN FACT OF GOD: HOW SCIENCE REVEALS THE ULTIMATE TRUTH ABOUT THE UNIVERSE. Despite centuries of conflict, it appears that the more we understand the intracacies of science, the more notions we have of a supreme causality that we, frankly, have no way to understand at present.
Essay Doctorate
Twentieth century philosopher: key theories and conceptual analysis
This paper examines the life, times and key theories of Karl Reimund Popper who was one the greatest philosophers of the 20th Century. The analysis discusses Popper’s key concepts and analyses that formed his work and his contributions to the field of philosophy. The influence of culture and time period on Popper’s ideas and the similarities and differences of his school of thought with those of his predecessors are also discussed.