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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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Research Paper Masters
Old Nurse\'s Story by Elizabeth Gaskell
This is a six page critical analysis of Elizabeth Gaskell's The Old Nurse's Story. It uses some outside resources to engage the text through dialogue and interaction. The paper is organized and structured. The core themes of patriarchy, social structures, family values, evil, death, and decay are examined through the lens of the short story and the act of literary analysis. It is an astute analysis.
Research Paper Undergraduate
The life of Socrates
For Socrates, the search for wisdom begins with an attempt to gain clarity as to who we truly are as human beings. Before we can presume to understand the world, we must begin by understanding the reality of our own consciousness. From a Socratic point of view, the world is reduced exclusively to the human world, everything else being inconsequential. Initially, the search for wisdom is understood in terms of my need to understand precisely who I am.
Paper Doctorate
Maus I And II Analysis
This is a three page paper about Art Spiegelman's graphic novels Maus and Maus II. Maus I and Maus II are about the son of Holocaust survivors. The mother committed suicide when she was 20 after the narrator was born, but the father was so upset after she died that he destroyed her memoirs. The father is grumpy and the narrator has a strained relationship with him but Art tries to capture the story anyway.
Research Paper Doctorate
Anthony Blond in His Book a Scandalous
Anthony Blond in his book A Scandalous History of the Roman Emperors (New York: Carroll & Graf, 2000), a book originally published in 1994, the author seems to have written a history of Rome for the current tabloid age,…
Paper Doctorate
Character analysis of Antigone using Stanislavski's system
Greek tragedy strikes the contemporary audiences with the same strength it had over two and a half millennia ago. Sophocles, along with Aeschylus and Euripides are among the most famous playwrights of the Greek ancient…
Essay Doctorate
Consumer culture and capitalism in Western societies
It can be hard to pinpoint a definition for consumerism. However, generally the term is used to describe people that conflate wants and needs. For example, some people might identify the new iPhone as a want that would be nice to have. While others actually would describe this as something "need" in order to be happy; to the extent that they will actually wait in line for hours on end to be the first to purchase the new iContraption. Consumerism can also include the concept of fashionable consumption. Fashionable consumption goes beyond what an individual actually needs in terms of their physical well-being.
Paper Doctorate
Essay on uploaded file details
This study presents a number of theories on whether babies and young children can or do think. The traditional theory is that of Piaget which says that young children do not have innate knowledge of the world and no sense of object permanence. Brooks agrees that they have no past as frame of reference and live only in the here and now. But new theories not state that babies actually think before they speak and already possess some rudimentary moral code inherent within. Gopnik proposes that babies think more scientifically than do scientists and in a way that nature designs will change the world.
Paper Doctorate
Live Concert Analysis How Doing Good Makes
The topic for this paper primarily revolves around design activitism and its aspects in contrast and or relation to the designs completed for social change. The paper primarily aims to focus on and answer the following question: How Doing Good Makes Us Feel Powerful And At The Same Time Powerless?
Essay Doctorate
Art Interview With an Artist Describe Your
This interview is conducted with an artist who does cartooning. In it the artist discusses his background, how he started out drawing, practiced painting, and took to cartooning for pay for clients over the Internet. In it the artist also discusses such things as the role of the artist in the modern world.
Thesis Undergraduate
Baby X In Most Modern Societies Education
The distinction between sex and gender is a relatively new issue in our world. Scientists have started to point out the difference between the two concepts once human sexuality has started to take a new turn in social sciences. Gender stereotypes pervade our society and are hard to fight. Lois Gould wrote a touching story about an experiment with a baby whose gender was kept hidden to the rest of the word for his childhood years. Ethical or unethical, the experiment is a proposition to come out of our own stereotypes and try to imagine the world from a different perspective.