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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
Candide: themes and analysis in Voltaire's satirical novel
Life is a journey and the best that we can hope for is to learn and benefit from knowledge. Not all knowledge is the same, however, and we must listen to teachers and philosophers with a skeptical ear.
Research Paper Doctorate
Western Religions Given the Remarkable
Given the remarkable diversity within each Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, it seems silly to generalize about the broader differences between the three "religions of the Book." Yet even though Judaism, Christianity,…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Buddhism and Judaism: comparative religious traditions
Conservative and Liberal Divisions of Buddhism and Judaism
Research Paper Undergraduate
Bilbao and its Basque culture
Basque Culture of Bilbao and the Regeneration of the Villa of Bilbao in Contemporary Times
Paper Undergraduate
A review of the Buddhist scripture the Sutta Pitaka
The discourses held within the Sutta Pitaka are said to be written for the common individual to easily understand them, and yet looking at their organization as a collection of discourses and searching the content of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Aquinas and Kant Thomas Aquinas
Thomas Aquinas and Immanuel Kant were born nearly half a millennium apart and, on the surface, both their styles of argumentation and their general approaches to philosophy appear equally distanced from each other.
Paper Undergraduate
Plato's philosophy and influence on Western thought
Plato's cave allegory offers a rich analogy of the way human beings perceive and react to reality. The people living in the cave are described as being in shackles; they are self-made prisoners or prisoners of their own…
Paper Undergraduate
Leviathan Thomas Hobbes and Mo
This paper is a synthesis paper about Thomas Hobbe's Leviathan, and Mo Tzu's General Writings. The ideas of Hobbes center around the idea of man being in a constant warring state, and that war is fought for profit or for glory. Mo Tzu takes the opposite branch, and believes in the idea of Universal Love. This idea is essentially the idea of equality of man and the rejection of war as a legitimate tool.
Paper High School
Realism and Impressionism in General,
In general, the Realist and Impressionist schools of art sought to move away from idealist schools that represented allegory and figurative ideals. Idealism was basically Platonic in that artists sought to substantiate…
Research Paper Doctorate
Global Changes in the Missiology
Global Changes in the Missiology of the 20th Century