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Fortune
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Fortune as a subject of study spans an unusually wide range of academic disciplines, from literature and philosophy to business, economics, and political science. The concept carries multiple meanings — material wealth, luck, fate, and the unpredictable forces that shape human outcomes — which makes it fertile ground for analysis across many courses. Works like Niccolò Machiavelli's The Prince treat fortune as a political and philosophical force that leaders must learn to confront, while literary texts such as Oedipus Tyrannus and The Beaux' Stratagem dramatize how chance and circumstance overturn human plans. Business contexts, including case studies of companies like Harley-Davidson, frame fortune in terms of risk, strategic decision-making, and the role of past actions in shaping future success or failure.

The papers collected under this topic reflect a genuinely diverse set of approaches. Some take a literary or philosophical angle, examining how characters and thinkers have understood fate, agency, and the reversals of luck. Others adopt a business case-study approach, analyzing how organizations navigate uncertainty and change. Still others engage with financial systems, American politics, and media figures, treating fortune as a lens for understanding power, money, and social mobility in real-world settings.

A strong essay on fortune begins by defining which dimension of the concept it addresses — luck, wealth, fate, or strategic risk — and commits to that focus throughout. Evidence drawn from close textual analysis, historical examples, or concrete business cases carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating fortune as a vague background theme rather than developing a specific, arguable claim about how it operates within the chosen subject.

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Paper Undergraduate
Feedback loops and their mechanisms
Wal-Mart relies on a complex network of feedback loops in order to help it meet its strategic objectives. They form one of the company's most important sources of competitive advantage - the ability to move quickly.
Research Paper Doctorate
Online Retailing in Asia: Challenges and Hong Kong's Market
¶ … online retailing operates, what kind of problems they face and the kind of environment they operate in. The author has also focused on Asian online retailing and special focus on Hong Kong online retailing.
Paper Doctorate
Eyre End Towards an Appropriate
This paper contains an analysis of the last passage in Charlotte Bronte's novel "Jane Eyre," focusing on the role that the character of St. John plays in the novel as a whole as both a religious figure and a figure of British imperialism and colonialism, and why the novel would be concluded with news about St. John rather than with Jane's own story.
Research Paper Doctorate
Origins of the Later Southern
The English settlement of Jamestown, Virginia, was founded on May 14, 1607 by Captain Christopher Newport and his fleet of a hundred or so Englishmen. In the sixteenth century, England was one of the most powerful…
Paper Undergraduate
Brigham Young and the Expanding American Frontier
Four page paper consisting of questions based only on one book: Brigham Young and the Expanding American Frontier. 1. Explain how Young's conversion to Methodism changes him. Also describe his time in Mendon & his introduction to Mormonism. 2. Describe the problems young had in 1838 in Missouri. Also describe young's time in England. 3. Explain young's role in Nauvoo & the reaction to polygamy. Describe smith's run for the presidency and his death. 4. Describe young's trip out west in 1846 & his dealing with Native Americans in 1847. 5. Describe how the Gold rush affected the Mormons. 6. List young's 3 types of business dealings in late 1850s. how young view the civil war? 7. Explain how the Transcontinental Railroad affected the Mormons. Describe young's attitudes towards women & their role within society. Explain the Untied Order & it4 variations.
Research Paper Doctorate
How Current Events Effect Public Opinion of America\'s Weaknesses
If physics can lend anything to the sphere of political science, it is that every action has an equal and opposite reaction. As the world becomes more quickly polarized than ever before, the public opinion of the…
Paper Doctorate
Husband\'s Message Portrays a Feeling
In "The Husband's Message" poetic devices such as the personification of the ply wood to represent the lord's feelings, allows the readers to feel the mood of the poem. The poem however, does not classify as an epic poem. In Sonnet 57, Shakespeare expresses his feelings about love and how far emotions can control an individual. This is written in an ironic manner that allows the reader to take a second glimpse at the poem. The role of women has changed from the Middle Ages through the Renaissance and this can be seen clearly in the poems, "Federigo's Falcon" and "Female Orations."
Essay Undergraduate
Robinson Crusoe: survival and isolation in early modern fiction
The adage "no man is an island" always holds true because humankind has always been a social being. By belonging to a group or society, individuals are expected to abide by the collective norms and behaviors thereto.
Paper Doctorate
The relationship between appearance, reality, and power in Machiavelli
The Prince was written by a career politician named Niccolo Machiavelli in the context of 16th Century Italy's shifting political landscape. Machiavelli's ideas were new in that they divorced politics from morality. In addition, he wrote at length about the relationship between reality, which was about the Prince gaining personal power, and appearance, which was about convincing people to give over their power to the Prince. The ability to do what was necessary in both reality and appearance amounted to virtu and made The Prince a seminal work that is still read 500 years after publication.
Research Paper Doctorate
John Rawls Political Philosopher
In the Preface to A Theory of Justice, the late philosopher John Rawls goes beyond what would normally be expected of an author in terms of laying out practical suggestions "to make things easier for the reader," such…