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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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Essay Undergraduate
Designing a Vision Experiment
The scientific method was standardized by Francis Bacon nearly 300 years ago and provided a model for those seeking answers to questions with a means to explore. The scientific method is inductive reasoning.
Essay Doctorate
Gravity's Rainbow and Other Cold War Literature and Film
¶ … Cold War dominated American culture, consciousness, politics and policy for most of the 20th century. Even after the fall of the Berlin Wall, which symbolized the fall of the Iron Curtain and therefore finale of the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Natural Right and History Leo Strauss
Strauss is contending that the "self-evident" natural rights of man are no more apparent because of a creeping relativism in thought and an increasing dependence on legalism. Thus, "the legislators and the courts"…
Essay High School
Instructions unclear, additional context needed
¶ … philosophical approaches to the study of equality presume that equality is an ideal, and suggest methods by which to achieve maximum equality. However, some philosophical approaches deny the inherent value of…
Paper Masters
Moral Man and Immoral Society
The reaction that I had to Reinhold Niebuhr's Moral Man and Immoral Society was extremely complicated, but I ultimately found the implications that Niebuhr's beliefs would have for the American political system to be…
Case Study Undergraduate
Why Only Christian Psychologists Can Practice "True Psychology"
Today, there are more than one hundred thousand licensed psychologists practicing in the United States. These mental health professionals are in a unique position to provide individuals, groups, and American society…
Paper Doctorate
Brain Is the Final Frontier, Even More
¶ … brain is the final frontier, even more so than outer space. Studying the brain is as difficult as studying outer space due to the limitations of technology. However, there are also ethical limitations to…
Paper Masters
John Rawls and Justice
Today's United States society is not just because it violates both principles of John Rawls' theory of justice based on the "original position." This paper will explain Rawls' principles and show how the U.S.
Paper Undergraduate
Karen Horney's theory of neurosis and human growth
Karen Horney's work of non-fiction, Neurosis and Human Growth, is many different things. It is an astute analysis of the self -- both as it exists inwardly and externally. It is a comparative effort on some of the most…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Meaning of Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra
William Shakespeare is important because, as T.S. Eliot said, Shakespeare (along with Dante) divide the world between them; there is no third."[footnoteRef:1] Eliot's point is that Shakespeare represents the height of…