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Enlightenment
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The Enlightenment refers to the broad intellectual movement that reshaped European thought around the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, emphasizing reason, individual freedom, and the critical examination of tradition and authority. It appears frequently in history courses, as well as in philosophy, political science, and religious studies. Scholars treat it as a pivotal period because its ideas about nature, power, and society helped lay the groundwork for modern democratic governance, scientific inquiry, and secular ethics. Students engage with it to understand how a shift in epistemological priorities — from faith and tradition toward reason and evidence — transformed political structures and cultural institutions across Europe and beyond.

The papers archived on this topic take several distinct approaches. Many focus on cause-and-effect relationships, particularly the Enlightenment's influence on events like the French Revolution and the broader English and American revolutionary contexts. Others adopt comparative frameworks, examining how Enlightenment ideas affected different religious traditions, including Christianity and Islam. Some papers engage with specific texts and concepts, such as Hobbes's Leviathan or questions of just war theory, while others trace the development of the Age of Reason through the work of philosophers more broadly. Historical and thematic overviews of Enlightenment thought in Europe also appear frequently.

A strong essay on this topic requires a focused thesis that moves beyond simply describing Enlightenment ideas and instead argues how or why those ideas produced specific consequences. Primary philosophical texts, historical events, and cross-cultural comparisons carry the most analytical weight. The most common pitfall is treating the Enlightenment as a single, unified movement — strong essays acknowledge internal tensions and variations across different national and religious contexts.

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Paper Undergraduate
Soren Kierkegaard and Fredric Nietzsche
Soren Kierkegaard and Fredric Nietzsche both fought against the rational empiricist streams that flowed from the Enlightenment. The main philosophical thought they opposed was Hegel and his method of giant system making.
Paper Undergraduate
Emanuel Kant's philosophical contributions and legacy
The Work of Kant and His Influence in History and Western Thought
Essay Masters
Post World War II Art
In this paper, we are going to be looking at art since the end of World War II. This is accomplished by examining different influences and the various impacts they will have on them. Once this takes place, is the point these ideas can show how specific influences affected various artists during this time.
Essay Undergraduate
Plato and Socrates -- Human Soul There
For centuries, the dual nature of humans in relation to ethics has puzzled philosophers. It is a philosophical construct that tries to explain how humans organize their moral and ethical beliefs within a given time period and within a given culture. However, ethics is typically more focused on understanding the way certain ideas are presented and acted upon in individual societies than making broad pronouncements of right and wrong. However, when one looks at the history of any philosophical subject, it is important to note that differing concepts of philosophy often arise “out of” that very historical and cultural fabric of the time – and then evolve so that they become more acceptable to future generations rather than contemporaneous ones
Essay Doctorate
Antonio Canova Was an Italian Sculptor From
Antonio Canova was an Italian sculptor from Venice who lived from 1757 to 1822. He primarily worked in marble and believed that he could use that medium to render an artistic view of human flesh. Canova lived during a time in which much of Europe was in turmoil. The Catholic Church was losing power based not only on secularism, but also on the nature of the relationship between the individual and God through Protestantism as well.
Essay Doctorate
Historical development of major schools of philosophical thought
This paper discusses various philosophical schools of thought, including existentialism, realism, and rationalism. In each of these schools of thought, there are aspects which are favorable and those which are not so favorable. Despite the fact that these philosophies have existed for centuries, they still have present importance.
Essay High School
Into the Wild: survival and nature in Alaska
This paper analyzes the "journey" of Chris McCandless, using Vogel's "journey" terms and how they apply to Chris as well as Joseph Campbell's hero-myth and how Chris fits the heroic monomyth. Chris fits several types of "journeyers" and transcends the heroic type to become a kind of heroic-saint, an ascetic who achieves epiphany.
Paper Doctorate
Dante\'s Inferno Siddhartha City of Glass
Discuss the role of process and travel in shaping the journey of the protagonists, comparing and contrasting at least two of the texts we have read.
Research Paper Doctorate
Characteristics and literature of the Romantic period
Because some English Romantics were political liberals in name such as Blake, Shelley, Byron, and Coleridge, Romanticism is falsely assumed to be a progressive ideology. This paper argues for the 19th century Romantic Movement's fundamental conservationism in its hostility to the French Revolution, fear of progressive change, and idealization of the pastoral and the past.
Essay Doctorate
British Literature Romanticism to Present
Following the liberating Age of Reason, the Enlightenment, the age when humanity was triumphing through literature and Rousseau's philosophy was inspiring revolutions, the age of Romanticism saw the birth of some genius…