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Happiness
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Happiness is one of the most enduring subjects in academic inquiry, appearing in philosophy, psychology, sociology, literature, and ethics courses alike. Its appeal lies in the tension between its universal relevance and its resistance to simple definition. Students are regularly asked to examine happiness not just as a feeling but as a philosophical concept, a social condition, and a moral question. Works and thinkers that surface repeatedly in this context include Aristotle, Socrates, Plato, Augustine, Kant, Mill, Buddha, and Ayn Rand, as well as C. S. Lewis and Daniel Gilbert, whose contrasting frameworks give students rich material for analysis and debate.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a striking range of approaches. Philosophical essays compare classical and modern conceptions of happiness, setting Aristotle against Gilbert or tracing disagreements among Socrates, Plato, and Augustine. Others take a critical analysis angle, examining specific texts such as C. S. Lewis's essay on happiness or exploring how figures like Charlie Chaplin in Modern Times dramatize the pursuit of a good life. Additional papers connect happiness to broader social forces, including Max Weber's Protestant Ethic, personal values development, and the relationship between money, desire, and individual fulfillment.

A strong essay on happiness begins with a precise working definition, since the word means different things across traditions and disciplines. Evidence drawn from primary philosophical texts, psychological research, or close literary reading carries more weight than general observation. The most common pitfall is writing in vague, personal terms without anchoring claims to a theoretical framework, which leaves the argument without the analytical structure that academic writing requires.

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Two models of feminism in Wollstonecraft and Chopin
A comparison of the different feminist perspectives as seen in Mary Wollstonecraft's "A Vindication of the RIghts of Woman" and Kate Chopin's novel "The Awakening" is presented, with each text used as a lens through which to read the other. The contrasts and differences between the theories are highlighted as a means of demonstrating conflicts within feminism.
Paper Doctorate
Ethics Plastic the Ethics of Plastic Surgery
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Research Paper Undergraduate
The smile: expressions and significance
Study of Relevant Literature on Smiling as a Non-Verbal Form of Communication: Typologies, Comparisons, and Situations
Research Paper Undergraduate
CS Lewis Lewis, Till We
Lewis, Till We Have Faces: A Myth Retold (pp.130-225)
Research Paper Undergraduate
Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams.
¶ … Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams. The story of the Wingfield family is tragic and without hope. Laura, the daughter, walks with a limp and is painfully shy and afraid of the "real" world.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Prostitution: social, economic, and legal perspectives
Within the grand catalogue of criminal offences, the asking for a reward by a young woman in return for a sexual service must surely rate as a trivial misdemeanor. Yet across the centuries and within many cultures, the…
Paper Undergraduate
Black Gender Gap Understanding Society,
In his article, "The Black Gender Gap," Ellis Cose (2003) writes about the recent success of black women, not in light of but certainly despite of black men. Although he quotes Alice Gordon's statement that black women…
Paper Masters
Joys Parenthood, Reconsidered by Robin
¶ … Joys Parenthood, Reconsidered by Robin W. Simon
Research Paper Doctorate
Moral Message in Children\'s Literature
I chose four children's classics: Charlotte's web (1952) by E.B. White, and other three children's fairy tales, two by Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm (Cinderella and Snow white and the seven dwarfs) and one by Charles Perrault…
Essay High School
Individualism Within Utopian and Dystopian Novels
Thomas More wrote Utopia in 1515 and in the story this place of "utopia" is told to him by a friend who encounters it upon his travels. Utopia is described by Giles, More's friend, as a place where there isn't any…