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Life
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What is Life?

Life as an academic topic appears across nearly every discipline because it touches the fundamental conditions of human existence — how individuals develop, make choices, navigate systems, and find meaning. In personal issues courses, sociology, nursing, literature, and ethics, students are asked to examine what shapes lived experience and how institutions, relationships, and culture either support or constrain individual ability. The topic resists easy definition, which is precisely what makes it intellectually rich: it forces writers to clarify terms, interrogate assumptions, and connect abstract concepts to concrete human realities.

The papers archived here reflect a genuinely wide range of approaches. Literary analysis appears in essays on works such as Bernice Morgan's fiction and Bessie Head's "The Prisoner Who Wore Glasses," where writers examine how characters construct identity, belonging, and personal freedom. Policy and ethical frameworks drive essays on abortion, DNR legislation, and prison overcrowding, while sociological and cultural analysis informs work on parenting styles, family therapy, and soccer hooliganism. Observational and practice-based writing — such as operating room reflections and evidence-based nursing — grounds the topic in professional experience, showing how the concept of life plays out in direct care and institutional settings.

A strong essay on this topic begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad statement about life in general. Evidence drawn from specific texts, case studies, policy documents, or observed practice carries far more weight than vague generalization. The most common pitfall is treating "life" as self-evident — a compelling essay defines its scope early, specifying which dimension of individual experience or social process it actually intends to examine.

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Paper Doctorate
Interview project methods and applications
My initial impressions of LA were refracted in different ways by the five interviews. At one time, a long time ago, according to Sandra, the teen counselor, Los Angeles was a different place where over the fence chatting was a norm and people congregated to share news and a hug. Today, teenagers and the younger generation as well as professionals and almost all citizens have become immured in a technological world that detaches them from the necessary support, hence, according to Sandra, teen counselor, depression has become more rampant. She sees drugs as a growing problem that will continue as long as technology and materialism rises as well as the gap between rich and poor. The gap between rich and poor was an ongoing problem. Also a counselor, but working in a very different part of the field and with a very different population, Malpede attempted to have the homeless recreate their unenviable situation through drama thus seeking relief and solution.
Paper Doctorate
14th Amendment on the United
¶ … 14th Amendment on the United States judicial system. It describes specific aspects of the law that are a direct result of due process being enforced at both the federal and state levels and discusses the importance…
Thesis Undergraduate
Skills, social inequality, and workplace success across income, class, and gender
Current times give us a far greater opportunity than ever before to practice these innate characteristics and to side-step deprivation of birth or fate. Potential employers may, and do, evaluate others based on external characteristics of socio-economic strata, gender, race, and so forth. Tendency to do so will, quite likely, continue despite national rules and regulations to the contrary. One who is determined, however, to pursue his dream and pursue a certain career can more confidently step in that direction by taking a non-conventional route such as becoming an entrepreneur, starting his or her own business and / or using the Internet. The Internet enables one to assume a guise where oen can transcend limitations of context and space and, using one's skills, market one's capacities (product or service) to others. Opportunities such as entrepreneurship and the Internet focus more on merit-based work or production than on extrinsic properties and these enable the individual to side-step potential limitations.
Paper Undergraduate
Stem Cell Research -- Ethical
Introduction The positive, progressive view of stem cell research raises the promise of one day helping to heal individuals with diseases like Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, spinal injuries, cancer, among other health issues and serious medical disorders. One of the controversial aspects of stem cell research relates to whether or not human embryos should be destroyed in order to conduct deep research into the potentiality of embryonic stem cells. This moral issue, along with other ethical questions, and updates on recent stem cell advances, will be addressed in this paper.
Thesis High School
Comparison and contrast analysis
One of modern society's seemingly paranoid neuroses is it's obsession with machines and their replacement of humanity. The ever-constant conflict between man's desire to produce things more efficiently, necessitating the replacement of human labor with machine labor, and the subsequent consumer-based society that has arisen because of it, has led to one of the most pressing social questions a society has ever faced. Is the modern world‘s rapid development of the planet leading to the destruction of civilization?
Paper Undergraduate
Crash of Japan Airlines Flight
The Japan Airline Flight 123 crash is considered the world's worst single-plane disaster. Faulty repair and delayed rescue led to more than 500 deaths when the aircraft hit two mountains in Gunma Prefecture. The repair applied to the Boeing 747 reportedly did not match established standards and this caused the aircraft to lose control and plunge. In additin,, Japanese officials did not allow American military forces to immediately come to the rescue
Paper Doctorate
Defining a good life and personal achievement strategies
This paper defines the "good life" as defined by several different issues. More specifically, it explains that living a good life means fulfilling one's personal needs, those of the members of one's immediate and extended family, and also contributing in some way to the wider good of others in the human community. In the near future, that means completing one's education, securing a good job in a chosen professional field, finding a person to spend one's life with, starting a family, and establishing everything necessary to meet the needs and guarantee the future happiness of one's family.
Paper Doctorate
Sukkot, Like Many Jewish Holidays,
This paper discusses the Jewish holiday of Sukkot. Beginning with Sukkot's origins as a harvest festival, the paper examines the biblical instructions to have Sukkot, found in Leviticus. It also looks at how modern Jews celebrate Sukkot, including the building of the sukkahs, in which Jews must dwell, either actually or symbolically, for the length of the holiday.
Paper Undergraduate
Human Behavior and Social Environment
"On eve of MLK Day, Michelle Alexander and Randall Robinson on the Mass Incarceration of Black Americans" (13th January, 2012). The show is a discussion between Tran Africa founder Randall Robinson and author Michelle Alexander about the disproportionate number of African-Americans that are represented in American correctional facilities that include prisons, jails, or that are on probation, or on parole. According to both founder and author, there are more African Americans currently incarcerated in the American system than were enslaved in 1850 and more Americans disenfranchised now than they were with the Jim Crow laws in 1870. Both presenters call for a greater emphasis on providing African Americans with dignity, education, and jobs rather than casting them into jail.
Paper Masters
Manchurian Candidate 1962 John Frankenheimer
John Frankenheimer began his career in the early days of American television in 1954 and directed over 150 television shows before going to the cinema in 1961. The quality of his major films is to take the viewer in the gut with powerful images and often indelible, imposing his own vision of the subject as indisputable evidence. (Kellner, pp285-305) He is not afraid to shock or provoke violent reactions in the audience and whatever the type of work it performs (small or large production). (Mitchell, pp41-54) To do so, his production is always the result of a lot of work in which he set up structures to complex camera movements bold and never free, which combined with his knowledge of the assembly allows him to surprise and 'hook the audience like few filmmakers are able. (Grice, pp144)