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Greeks
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Ancient Greece stands as one of the most studied civilizations in academic history, appearing in courses ranging from Western civilization and classical history to philosophy, architecture, and literature. Its significance lies in the breadth of its contributions — political thought, art, science, and storytelling all trace foundational roots to Greek culture. Because Greek ideas spread so widely and influenced so many later societies, the topic invites analysis across multiple disciplines, making it a recurring subject in both introductory surveys and advanced seminars. Works such as the Homeric Hymns, the philosophical writings of Plato, and the development of Greek historiography give students rich primary material to engage with directly.

Student papers on this topic approach ancient Greece from a wide range of angles. Architectural studies examine the development of columns and the legacy of Greek and Roman building traditions through history. Philosophical papers focus on thinkers like Plato and questions of education and value. Historical surveys trace Greek civilization across major periods, connecting it to broader Western development. Literary and textual analyses draw on works like the Homeric Hymns, while more focused studies explore concepts such as the sublime or Greek historiography as a discipline. Some papers extend into cross-cultural comparisons, touching on trade, early Christianity, and the civilization's lasting influence on later eras.

A strong essay on ancient Greece begins with a focused thesis that connects a specific Greek contribution or period to a larger historical or cultural argument. Evidence drawn from primary texts, architectural examples, or documented historical events carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is writing too broadly — attempting to cover all of Greek civilization in a single essay undermines analytical depth, so narrowing the scope to one theme, period, or question produces far more persuasive work.

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Paper Doctorate
Iliad Metamorphoses Book 5 [Ceres Proserpina]. You
This paper compares and contrasts Homer's Iliad with Ovid's Metamorphoses Book V. In Homer, characters are three-dimensional and capable of changing, such as when Achilles concedes Hector's body to Priam of Troy. In contrast, Ovid's tale is humorous and parodies rather than celebrates heroism. Ovid uses one-dimensional characters who are figures of fun, not moral exemplars.
Research Paper Doctorate
Homer\'s Life and Epics and Their Effect and Contribution to Western Civilization
Homer was a legendary Greek poet who is traditionally credited as the author of the major Greek epics the "Iliad and the Odyssey," as well as the comic mini-epic "Batracholmyomachia" (The Frog-Mouse War), the corpus of…
Paper Undergraduate
Death of a Salesman: Modern-Day
Aristotle established a definition for a tragedy centuries ago that is still taught today. Aristotle believed that a tragedy must contain specific elements including an imitation of life, a hero with a tragic flaw, a…
Paper Doctorate
Roman World Ancient Romans Paid
Ancient Romans paid special attention to their health and did not hesitate to employ a series of acts they knew would bring them physical benefits. While people in Ancient Greece were especially interested in how each…
Essay Doctorate
Analysis of source document with supporting evidence
It is a summary of the most important elements of your paper. All numbers in the abstract, except those beginning a sentence, should be typed as digits rather than words. To count the number of words in this paragraph,…
Thesis Doctorate
Environmental issues in business ethics
This paper explores journals, books, and articles published online that report on environmental ethics, business ethics, and the relationship between business and the environment in a bid to examine environmental issues, business ethics in the Middle East. The research takes into consideration Kant's theory while exploring business ethics in the Middle East.
Essay Doctorate
Climatic determinism in Hippocrates' Airs Waters Places
A close reading of "Airs, Waters, Places" by Hippocrates will show that it was the first instance of climatic (environmental determinism. Climatic Determinism is based on the idea that the climate, the natural…
Essay Doctorate
Indigenous Populations in Republican Rome (Ca. 500
Indigenous populations in Republican Rome (ca. 500 BCE – 31 BCE) There were number of indigenous populations that were conquered by the Roman Republic whilst on the expansionary course. The fundamental issues that these populations, isolated ethnic minorities faced were regarding the preservation of their culture, their economic life, and their right to the properties in which they lived since centuries. Equality is the paramount notion that comes to mind regarding ‘citizenship'. Race and gender have been predominant factors that have enabled the elites to exclude the indigenous people from their right to their properties and the lives they live.
Paper High School
Ancient astronauts: evidence and theories
Adherents of the Ancient Astronaut thesis believe that intelligent extraterrestrial beings have visited Earth in antiquity and made contact with humans in certain points of our history. This encounter – they emphasize – can be evidenced from aspects such as religion, ancient culture, and technologies. A derivative of this thesis is that many, if not all, of the humans in existence today are products of the original extra-terrestrials who populated the earth in a pre-historic period. We were either created by them or born from them, possibly in a process that was described by Thomas Gold, a professor of astronomy as a "garbage theory" where humans spawned form extra-terrestrial waste. A sub-theory states that much of our human knowledge, religion, and culture may have originated from these extra-terrestrials who built (or supported human in building) many of the marvels on Earth such as the pyramids in Egypt or the Moai stone heads of Easter Island (Lieb, 1998). Adherents of this view have amassed an arsenal of reasons to support their point, but few academicians if any accept them. Scientific research has not found any conclusive evidence and all assertions of ancient astronauts remain unsupported.
Paper Undergraduate
Christianity in Albert Camus' The Stranger
The motif of the crucifix in the courtroom is significant of Camus' brush with Christianity through the novel of the ‘Stranger' as a whole. The examining magistrate waves the crucifix at Meursault symbolizing that all that Meursault stands for, and indirectly, therefore, Camus, militates against the basic axioms of Christianity. And what are these axioms? Christianity believes in life after death – in immortality of the soul and continuance of eternal life. Meursault refuses to hope, claiming that human life is irrational and purposeless and that death is the end-result to all creatures. More so, that existence of soul does not exist ant that it is futile, if not cruel and absurd to hope. Meursault, and through him his creator, Camus, would have been surprised to discover that Christianity's main belief is not immortality of the soul, but rather immortality of the body.