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God
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What is God?

The concept of God sits at the center of theological, philosophical, and humanistic inquiry, making it one of the most broadly studied subjects across religious studies, philosophy, and literature courses. Essays on this topic engage with foundational questions about existence, faith, and the nature of divine being. Students are drawn to it because it bridges abstract reasoning and lived human experience, appearing in scriptural analysis, ethical frameworks, and even discussions of mythology. Works and texts that surface repeatedly in this area include the Bible, the writings of C. S. Lewis, and narratives from both Christian and non-Christian traditions, each offering distinct entry points into questions about who or what God is and how that understanding shapes human life.

The papers archived under this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some pursue philosophical argument, directly examining the existence of God through logic and reason. Others apply literary or comparative analysis, such as weighing characters like Maheo and God across different cultural stories, or reading Flannery O'Connor's fiction through a theological lens. Doctrinal and scriptural close-reading is also common, with papers focusing on specific biblical passages, figures like Melchizedek, the miracles of Jesus, or the significance of narratives in Genesis. A smaller set of papers connects theological ideas to ethics, history, or human experience more broadly.

A strong essay on this topic requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of belief. Evidence drawn from primary texts — scripture, literary works, or philosophical arguments — carries the most weight and should be cited closely. The most common pitfall is conflating personal belief with analytical argument; even when writing about faith, the essay should engage critically with concepts, sources, and competing interpretations.

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Research Paper Doctorate
State of Human Rights in the Arab World
As stated by the "Universal Declaration of Human Rights" in the United Nations, Human rights has almost become one of the most important factors that decided the development of a country.
Research Paper Doctorate
Women in the Odyssey and King James
Women in the Odyssey and King James Bible
Research Paper Doctorate
Comparison of Julius Cesar to George W. Bush
William Shakespeare's play, Julius Caesar explores the social and political underpinnings of perhaps one of the most famous assassinations of all time, the assassination of Julius Caesar by his friends.
Research Paper Doctorate
Death of a Salesman: Tragedy in Prose
Tragedy, can easily lure us into talking nonsense."
Research Paper Doctorate
Global terrorism: causes, impacts, and counterterrorism strategies
Terrorist Groups Are Aligning to Conduct Global Terrorism.
Research Paper Doctorate
Son of Sam David Berkowitz
¶ … summer of 1976 to the end of summer 1977, a reign of murderous terror gripped New York City - it was the year of the Son of Sam. David Berkowitz would eventually be arrested, tried, and convicted for the series of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Christianity and the Views of Sigmund Freud
This paper discusses the concept of a Creator in Christianity and also focuses on the views held by Sigmund Freud and William James on this subject. While Christianity believes firmly in the existence of Creator, Freud…
Essay Doctorate
Christian Security the Christian Doctrine of Eternal
The concept of eternal security denotes that one who recognizes Christ as his Lord and Savior will be granted eternal salvation. However, some Christian scholars object to this perspective, instead arguing that this allows leniency for sinful behavior. The discussion here measures this view of conditional security against the concept of eternal security.
Paper Doctorate
Alexander Solzhenitsyn\'s One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
In Alexander Solzhenitsyn's One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (1962), Special Camp 104 represents the entire Soviet Union in microcosm, as a kind on anti-Utopia or dystopia. In other words, Special Camp 104 is Stalin's Soviet Union, a totalitarian police state in which the population is mostly slave labor, except for those who manage to obtain slightly more privileged positions as overseers through luck, cunning, bribery or connections. As the title indicates, the entire story is told through the eyes of the narrator, Ivan Denisovich Shukhov, Special Prisoner S-854, from the time he wakes up in the morning until he goes to sleep at night. Shukhov is not a great hero or political dissident, but an ordinary Russian peasant who was sent to the camp because he was taken prisoner by the Germans in World War II, contrary to Stalin's orders. As soon as these men were freed from the Nazi camps—the few who survived—they ended up in the Soviet GULAG or Chief Administration of Corrective Labor Camps. Like most of the prisoners or zecs in these labor camps. Shukhov was simply an ordinary worker, and during his day his task was to work on the construction site of a power plant. His main concern is not to revolt against the authorities of even protest mildly against the system, but simply obtain enough food, clothing and warmth to continue on another day, and he even takes pride over how much work he can do with so little food. He is not an educated or reflective man and thinks little about the larger political and social questions, but through his seemingly simple narrative the broader outlines of Stalinist society become clear.
Paper Undergraduate
Cross currents between yoga philosophy and Thelemic texts
¶ … Cross-Currents of philosophy between the Yoga-Sutra of Patanjali, Parama rthasa ra of Abhinavagupta, and Aleister Crowley's Argentum Astrum