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Human Nature
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Human nature sits at the intersection of philosophy, psychology, sociology, and the humanities, making it a subject that appears across a wide range of courses and disciplines. The central academic question is deceptively simple: what are people fundamentally like, and what drives individual and collective behavior? Because that question has no single answer, it generates ongoing debate. Works and figures as varied as Voltaire, Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Daniel Levinson's developmental framework in Seasons of a Man's Life, and Fritjof Capra's The Hidden Connections all surface in student writing on this topic, reflecting just how broadly human nature reaches across literary, scientific, and philosophical traditions.

Student papers approach the topic from several distinct angles. Some take a philosophical or comparative route, examining how thinkers like Voltaire frame human goodness or corruption against other ideological perspectives. Others adopt a historical lens, exploring how events such as the Origins and Rise of National Socialism reveal darker dimensions of collective behavior. Literary analysis appears as well, with texts like Huckleberry Finn used to trace ideas about race relations, innocence, and society. Additional papers engage developmental or psychological frameworks, spiritual formation, personality theory, and even utopian design, as seen in discussions of Walden Two.

A strong essay on human nature requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of everything humans do or feel. Evidence drawn from a specific text, historical case, or theoretical framework carries far more weight than vague generalizations. The most common pitfall is treating "human nature" as self-evident — the essay must define what conception of human nature it is actually examining and then test that conception against concrete evidence.

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Paper Masters
Satire in the writings of Voltaire and Hogarth
¶ … satire in the writings of Voltaire and the etchings of Hogarth. Voltaire (1694-1778) was a philosopher, critic, writer, and one of the leading intellectual figures of the French Enlightenment.
Paper Undergraduate
Pavilion on the Links
This paper discusses and analyzes The Link on the Pavilion by Robert Louis Steven. It includes a summary of the plot as well as an analysis of the central themes. Central to this discussion is the view that Stevenson was concerned with the duality of existence and especially with the opposites and conflicts within the individual human being. The paper also suggests that the sense of mystery and wonder is a central unifying aspect of this short story as well as many of his works.
Paper Undergraduate
Literary analysis of short stories
¶ … Domestic Demonism: '"the Lottery" by Shirley Jackson versus "A Good Man is Hard to Find" by Flannery O'Connor
Research Paper Undergraduate
Employee motivation concepts and theories
The issue of employee motivation is one that has become a central concern of management and leadership in modern business. There has been an increased realization in theory and praxis that employees are motivated by…
Paper Undergraduate
Open Boat Navigating \"The Open
Navigating "The Open Boat": An Examination of Critical Approaches to the Work of Stephen Crane
Paper Doctorate
The formal characteristics of Asterios Polyp
A variety of literary and audiovisual communication vehicles offer writers, photographers and videographers the ability to express themselves and entertain and/or inform their readers and viewers.
Paper Undergraduate
Analysis of "Mending Wall" by Robert Frost
Irony and Imagery Explored in "Mending Wall"
Paper Doctorate
Judaism and Buddihsm Dow Defined
Dow defined religion as a human activity which is easily accepted, but within the framework of reality that it creates for itself. By accepting the existence of whatever myth, god, spirit or supernatural force that is…
Paper Doctorate
Themes and narrative elements in Jackson's The Lottery and Collins' The Hunger Games
This paper compares and contrasts the themes, ideas, and genres of Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" and the film adaptation of Suzanne Collins' The Hunger Games. The former is a short story satire while the latter is a roving epic with heroes and heroines. Both, however, look at the darker side of human nature--in different ways.
Paper Undergraduate
Daniel Levinson's stage theory of adult development
Examination of Levinson's Developmental Stage Model