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Lie
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The concept of lying intersects with nearly every academic discipline, from philosophy and ethics to political science, literature, and healthcare. Students encounter this topic in courses that examine moral reasoning, civic responsibility, communication, and human behavior. What makes it academically interesting is its complexity: a lie is rarely just a false statement but involves intent, context, power, and consequence. Works like Sam Shepard's A Lie of the Mind and texts such as the King James Bible appear across student writing, reflecting how deception functions as a theme in both sacred and secular literature. Political contexts, including the conduct of government officials and campaign rhetoric, raise questions about accountability and public trust that give the topic immediate relevance.

Student papers on this subject approach it from strikingly varied angles. Literary analysis focuses on characters whose deception drives plot and psychological conflict, particularly in dramatic works and classical texts like Oedipus the King. Other papers take a policy or civic orientation, examining how dishonesty operates in government or political campaigns. Case-study approaches appear in healthcare writing, where nursing practice raises ethical questions about truth-telling with patients. Cultural and historical angles emerge in discussions of religion, Rastafari thought, and ethnic traditions where concepts of truth carry community meaning.

A strong essay on lying needs a focused thesis that commits to a specific context — moral, political, literary, or professional — rather than treating deception in the abstract. Evidence drawn from close reading, case analysis, or documented situations carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating different kinds of dishonesty without distinguishing intent, scale, or consequence, which weakens the argument's precision.

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George Tinker\'s Book Missionary Conquest
It is often said that there is nothing so dangerous as a convert or a missionary. Although many take this idea as a kind of "tongue in cheek" characterization of the excesses of those "blinded by faith," there remains a…
Paper Doctorate
Macbeth's Porter Scene: Prose-Poetry and Dark Imagery
In Act I Scene 2 of the tragedy of Macbeth, Shakespeare -- after giving a brutally graphic description of how Macbeth "unseam'd…from the nave to the chaps" an enemy soldier -- makes his hero's name rhyme with the word…
Paper Undergraduate
Bible Esoteric and Dated. Fee and Stuart
Fee and Stuart in "How to Read the Bible for All Its Worth", show the applicability of the Bible and provide readers with the tools of applying the Bible to their contemporary lives. For them there is no "then and there" to the text, rather than "then and there" of the text can equitably be applied to the "here and now" of contemporaneous living. The authors in effect build two bridges; there is the bridge between Church and lay man and the bridge between Church and exegetical scholar. Whilst the exegetical scholar approaches the text from the past trying to see ‘what it meant", the author tell us that the text is far more than that: it is applicable not only for the "then" but also for the "now" and, therefore, people should approach it with the intent of ‘what does it mean" and "what will it mean". In other words, each of us, regardless of scholarly background, should connect the '''then and there' of the original text to the 'here and now' of our own life settings" (p. 10). The operative premise is that the texts of the living Word "mean what they meant" (p. 11).
Essay Doctorate
Adverse childhood experiences and associations with long-term health outcomes
A female colleague of mine was subjected to sexual abuse as young children, and she suffered severe emotional trauma as a result of that abuse. "Gloria," was unlucky to have an alcoholic father, who would come home late…
Paper Doctorate
Unpredictable as Animals. They Are More Unpredictable
¶ … unpredictable as animals. They are more unpredictable than animals, unless you include wild animals. Domestic animals are really very predictable. For that matter, if one knows anything about wild animal behavior,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Motivation and Job Satisfaction as Factors in Nurse Retention
Motivation as a Factor in Nurse Retention
Research Paper Doctorate
Affect of Lying on Public Administrators
¶ … role as a public administrator is usually beset by conflicts. These conflicts, as in all organizations, stem from the vested interests of various individuals with their own agendas meeting personal objectives while…
Research Paper Doctorate
Romantic literature: themes, history, and characteristics
The purpose of this paper is to introduce and discuss the poem "The Bride of the Greek Isle," by Felicia Hemans, and discuss the author's life as it relates to the poem.
Paper Undergraduate
Othello Iago Is Introduced in the First
This is a three-page paper about Othello. The question selected for discussion is "Does Iago act unreasonably, given how he has been treated in the play?Support your position with a discussion of three relevant quotations from the play." This question is answered with several quotes in a meaty essay. Iago does not act reasonably in spite of his being snubbed in his career and his love life.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Paradise Lost
In Paradise Lost by John Milton, Satan represents the royalist, Catholic and aristocratic enemies of the Puritans during the civil wars and religious wars of the 17th Century and reflects the culture and events of the era such as the Renaissance, Reformation and Scientific Revolution. Milton was a Puritan who had supported Oliver Cromwell in the English Civil War and the overthrow of the king, aristocracy and Church of England.