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Explanation
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Explanation as a mode of academic writing appears across virtually every discipline, from biology and economics to history, theology, and technology. Rather than arguing a position or narrating events, explanatory writing prioritizes clarity — breaking down complex systems, processes, or phenomena so that a reader can genuinely understand them. This makes it a foundational skill in English composition courses, where students learn to present information in structured, accessible ways regardless of subject matter.

The papers collected here reflect the broad range of contexts in which explanation is required. Some take a scientific or technical approach, such as examining how LASIK surgery works or identifying the symptoms caused by exposure to mercury and arsenic. Others explain organizational structures, business strategies, or economic paradoxes like the diamond-water problem studied in microeconomics. Still others address social, legal, or cultural subjects — from reciprocity within the Iroquois Confederacy to the traditions of the Catholic faith — demonstrating that explanation adapts to whatever situation or subject demands it.

A strong explanatory essay begins with a clear sense of scope: identify precisely what needs to be understood and why it matters to the reader. Evidence carries weight when it is specific and well-sourced — definitions, data, examples, and step-by-step reasoning all serve the goal of genuine understanding. The most common pitfall is confusing explanation with argument; an explanatory thesis states what something is or how it works, not what the writer believes about it. Keeping that distinction sharp ensures the writing stays focused on illuminating rather than persuading.

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Paper Undergraduate
Humans Have Wondered About Certain
Kant described a clear difference between phenomena (objects as interpreted by human understanding) and noumena (objects as things-in-themselves, those in which humans cannot directly experience). Modern phenomenology was dissatisfied with this limited approach to all things knowable, and attempts to create the conditions for the objective study of topics that are typically found to be subjective – judgments, emotions, perceptions. It focuses on a scientific method, but is not clinical or biological; but rather it seeks to use a more systematic reflection of ideas to determine a more structured approach to experience
Research Paper Doctorate
Sarbanes-Oxley Act: Overview and impact
While most Americans know the names Enron and Worldcom, fewer know the term Sarbanes-Oxley Act; however, despite the alarming impact of the two business disasters, the potential impact of Sarbanes-Oxley stands to exceed…
Paper Doctorate
Evaluation of James Joyce's "A Mother" and critical interpretations of cultural representation
What was the social scene in Dublin at the time James Joyce wrote the Dubliners and in particular his iconic short story "A Mother" -- one of the most debated tales in the Dubliners?
Paper Undergraduate
Mind-Body Dualism: Leibniz, and Spinoza\'s
This paper examines Leibniz and Spinoza and how they approach the mind/body question. It explains how Leibniz takes a dualist approach to the issue and contrasts that approach with Spinoza's unified approach. It concludes that, only by rejecting dualism, can Spinoza come to the conclusion that mankind can achieve significant knowledge of Nature.
Paper Undergraduate
Models of staggered price adjustment with inflation inertia
In order to evaluate monetary policies more effectively, monetary economists has been developing quantitative models that incorporate fundamental ideas relating to time inconsistency and forward looking expectations.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Religious studies on body harm for spiritual purposes
Hurting the Body for the Sake of the Soul
Paper Masters
Interpersonal Real World Interpersonal Issues
Real World Interpersonal Issues in Places of Business: A Produce Product Shrinkage Case Study
Research Paper Doctorate
Weber\'s Conceptualization of Bureaucracy
Weber's conception of bureaucracy and "Office Space"
Research Paper Doctorate
Social Inequality, Capital, and Economic Justice Explained
One hundred years ago, Henry George's Progress and Poverty was more widely read than any other work on economics, including Marx's Capital (Smiley pp). Both George and Marx proposed radical solutions to the general…
Research Paper Doctorate
Sports sociology: concepts, theories, and social analysis
¶ … sport has come to be the leading definer of masculinity in mass culture." Bob Connell, 1995